ZBar::Image(3pm)
NAME
Barcode::ZBar::Image - image object to scan for bar codes
SYNOPSIS
use Barcode::ZBar;
my $image = Barcode::ZBar::Image->new();
$image->set_format('422P');
$image->set_size(114, 80);
$image->set_data($raw_bits);
my @symbols = $image->get_symbols();
DESCRIPTION
- Barcode::ZBar::Image is used to pass images to the bar code scanner.
It wraps raw image data with the meta-data required to interpret it
(size, pixel format, etc) - Image Formats
- Image data formats are represented by (relatively) standard "Four
Character Codes" (fourcc), represented by four character strings in
Perl. A list of supported formats is available on the project wiki. - Examples:
- o 'GREY' - single 8bpp intensity plane
- o 'BGR3' - 24bpp packed RGB component format
- o 'YUYV' - 12bpp packed luminance/chrominance (YCbCr) format
REFERENCE
- Methods
- new()
Create a new Barcode::ZBar::Image object. The size, pixel format
and data must be defined before the object may be used. - get_format()
set_format(format)Return/specify the fourcc code corresponding to the image pixel
format. - get_sequence()
set_sequence(seq_num)Return/specify the video frame or page number associated with the
image. - get_size()
set_size(width, height)Return/specify the (width, height) image size tuple. - get_data()
set_data(raw)Return/specify the raw image data as a binary string. - get_symbols()
Return a list of scanned Barcode::ZBar::Symbol results attached to this image.
- convert(format)
Return a new Barcode::ZBar::Image object converted to the indicated fourcc format. Returns "undef" if the conversion is not supported. Conversion complexity ranges from CPU intensive to trivial
depending on the formats involved. Note that only a few
conversions retain color information.
SEE ALSO
Barcode::ZBar, Barcode::ZBar::Image, Barcode::ZBar::Symbol
http://zbar.sf.net
AUTHOR
Jeff Brown, <spadix@users.sourceforge.net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2008-2009 (c) Jeff Brown <spadix@users.sourceforge.net>
- The ZBar Bar Code Reader is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.