Plessey Code

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A Plessey Code Barcode Label

Plessey Code is a 1D linear barcode symbology based on pulse-width modulation, developed in 1971 by The Plessey Company plc, a British-based company.[1] It is one of the first barcode symbology, and is still used rarely in some libraries and for shelf tags in retail stores, in part as a solution to their internal requirement for stock control. The system was first used in the early 1970s by J.Sainsbury to identify all of its products on supermarket shelves for its product restocking system.

The chief advantages are the relative ease of printing using the dot-matrix printers popular at the time of the code's introduction, and its somewhat higher density than the more common 2 of 5 and 3 of 9 codes. It has later led several variations as Anker Code by ADS Company, Telxon, and MSI (also known as Plessey modified). It is difficult to have the specifications for them nowadays and thus hard to tell the differences between them (except for MSI), because it was mainly available as a paper document and has since been discontinued.

Encoding[edit]

Plessey Code barcode composition

The barcode encodes hexadecimal digits (i.e., the hex digits 0-F) as 4 bars (bits). The LSB is on the first bar on the left, and the MSB is the last bar on the right. A "0" bit is represented as a narrow bar, followed by a wide space. The "1" is represented by a wide bar, followed by a narrow space.

The barcode can be read in either direction (left to right or right to left).

The barcode comprises:

  • the forward start code
  • the label / data digits
  • the check code, for error detection
  • the termination bar
  • the reverse start code

Forward start code[edit]

The forward start code is "1101". It defines the beginning of the encoded text.

Label[edit]

Plessey Code values

The character of the text to encode are hexadecimal values encoded as reversed BCD

Value Encoding Value Encoding Value Encoding Value Encoding
0 0000 4 0010 8 0001 C 0011
1 1000 5 1010 9 1001 D 1011
2 0100 6 0110 A 0101 E 0111
3 1100 7 1110 B 1101 F 1111

Check code[edit]

The check code for error detection and correction is as CRC, using polynomial division. Is uses 2 characters, or 8 bits. The generator polynomial is with n=8, in binary "111101001".

Termination bar[edit]

The termination bar follows the CRC. It's a full pitch bar.

Reverse start code[edit]

The reverse start code, with the forward start code, are used to detect the direction of reading : from left to right or right to left. It's encoded as a reversed "0011". Reversed because the "0" is represented by a wide space and simple bar, and "1" as a simple space and wide bar.

Dimensions[edit]

bit dimensions

The dimensions of the bars and spaces are defined by the following rules :

, with b < 0.229 mm

, with c > 0.127 mm

Bit dimension in mm :

"1" "0"
bit/inch pitch 'p' width min nom max width min nom max
40 0.635 bar 'a' 0.305 0.343 0.381 bar 'c' 0.114 0.127 0.152
space 'b' 0.254 0.292 0.305 space 'd' 0.471 0.508 0.533
32 0.787 bar 'a' 0.394 0.432 0.470 bar 'c' 0.127 0.152 0.173
space 'b' 0.318 0.356 0.394 space 'd' 0.584 0.635 0.685
25 (std.) 1.020 bar 'a' 0.533 0.584 0.635 bar 'c' 0.127 0.178 0.229
space 'b' 0.381 0.432 0.483 space 'd' 0.787 0.838 0.889

Values are slightly different for Anker Code

Before and after each barcode, there should be margins of 4 bits.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Schworak, Glenn J. (21 March 2012). "Plessey Barcodes". EAN Data. Retrieved 9 February 2024.

External links[edit]