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How to create barcode in Ubuntu via a GUI?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Alternative for Exchange 2007 mail and calender sync and shared + public calenders and folders?GUI-less music player with auto-updating libraryCould I use my webcam as a barcode reader?Is there a program that will emulate typewriter sounds?How to differentiate barcode scanner data from regular keyboard input?Application (or code) to download full size images from a gallery with thumbnailsHow can ubuntu recognize a barcode reader?Add Timestamp USB barcode scannerPanasonic CF-U1 Toughbook Barcode scanner not detectedUBUNTU 18.10 and barcode printer





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







7















I used barcode app which is a stand alone program to run the barcode library with CLI mode only.



So, What a good software GUI used to create barcode in Ubuntu 12.04.



I've come to KBarcode but it seems no version for Ubuntu 12.04



Also I come to TBarCode/X but the last version for Ubuntu was for Ubuntu 11.04



UPDATE: I don't want CLI tools I already used most of them before, I just want GUI.



I prefer not to use the Libreoffice extension since the app have to be used in some embedded environment and not preferred to install libroffice just for making barcode!



For Closing Votes: Could you please tell me how this is too broad?! Then I think all software recommendation questions should be closed as too broad!!!



For downvoters: Could you please leave a comment for reason of downvoting










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Its OK I read your comments, you can remove the paragraph for me from the question if you wish, you are correct I simply presented a list of options to try as I don't have the hardware to test them, so I get your point. Don't know who down voted or close voted without comments, that annoys me, don't see why this question should be downvoted.

    – Mark Kirby
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:03






  • 1





    @markkirby I like your sportsman soul friend , I'm going to remove that paragraph as you wish

    – Maythux
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:05


















7















I used barcode app which is a stand alone program to run the barcode library with CLI mode only.



So, What a good software GUI used to create barcode in Ubuntu 12.04.



I've come to KBarcode but it seems no version for Ubuntu 12.04



Also I come to TBarCode/X but the last version for Ubuntu was for Ubuntu 11.04



UPDATE: I don't want CLI tools I already used most of them before, I just want GUI.



I prefer not to use the Libreoffice extension since the app have to be used in some embedded environment and not preferred to install libroffice just for making barcode!



For Closing Votes: Could you please tell me how this is too broad?! Then I think all software recommendation questions should be closed as too broad!!!



For downvoters: Could you please leave a comment for reason of downvoting










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Its OK I read your comments, you can remove the paragraph for me from the question if you wish, you are correct I simply presented a list of options to try as I don't have the hardware to test them, so I get your point. Don't know who down voted or close voted without comments, that annoys me, don't see why this question should be downvoted.

    – Mark Kirby
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:03






  • 1





    @markkirby I like your sportsman soul friend , I'm going to remove that paragraph as you wish

    – Maythux
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:05














7












7








7


4






I used barcode app which is a stand alone program to run the barcode library with CLI mode only.



So, What a good software GUI used to create barcode in Ubuntu 12.04.



I've come to KBarcode but it seems no version for Ubuntu 12.04



Also I come to TBarCode/X but the last version for Ubuntu was for Ubuntu 11.04



UPDATE: I don't want CLI tools I already used most of them before, I just want GUI.



I prefer not to use the Libreoffice extension since the app have to be used in some embedded environment and not preferred to install libroffice just for making barcode!



For Closing Votes: Could you please tell me how this is too broad?! Then I think all software recommendation questions should be closed as too broad!!!



For downvoters: Could you please leave a comment for reason of downvoting










share|improve this question
















I used barcode app which is a stand alone program to run the barcode library with CLI mode only.



So, What a good software GUI used to create barcode in Ubuntu 12.04.



I've come to KBarcode but it seems no version for Ubuntu 12.04



Also I come to TBarCode/X but the last version for Ubuntu was for Ubuntu 11.04



UPDATE: I don't want CLI tools I already used most of them before, I just want GUI.



I prefer not to use the Libreoffice extension since the app have to be used in some embedded environment and not preferred to install libroffice just for making barcode!



For Closing Votes: Could you please tell me how this is too broad?! Then I think all software recommendation questions should be closed as too broad!!!



For downvoters: Could you please leave a comment for reason of downvoting







software-recommendation barcode






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 22 '15 at 7:34







Maythux

















asked Jun 30 '15 at 10:40









MaythuxMaythux

52.4k34176220




52.4k34176220








  • 1





    Its OK I read your comments, you can remove the paragraph for me from the question if you wish, you are correct I simply presented a list of options to try as I don't have the hardware to test them, so I get your point. Don't know who down voted or close voted without comments, that annoys me, don't see why this question should be downvoted.

    – Mark Kirby
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:03






  • 1





    @markkirby I like your sportsman soul friend , I'm going to remove that paragraph as you wish

    – Maythux
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:05














  • 1





    Its OK I read your comments, you can remove the paragraph for me from the question if you wish, you are correct I simply presented a list of options to try as I don't have the hardware to test them, so I get your point. Don't know who down voted or close voted without comments, that annoys me, don't see why this question should be downvoted.

    – Mark Kirby
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:03






  • 1





    @markkirby I like your sportsman soul friend , I'm going to remove that paragraph as you wish

    – Maythux
    Jul 1 '15 at 8:05








1




1





Its OK I read your comments, you can remove the paragraph for me from the question if you wish, you are correct I simply presented a list of options to try as I don't have the hardware to test them, so I get your point. Don't know who down voted or close voted without comments, that annoys me, don't see why this question should be downvoted.

– Mark Kirby
Jul 1 '15 at 8:03





Its OK I read your comments, you can remove the paragraph for me from the question if you wish, you are correct I simply presented a list of options to try as I don't have the hardware to test them, so I get your point. Don't know who down voted or close voted without comments, that annoys me, don't see why this question should be downvoted.

– Mark Kirby
Jul 1 '15 at 8:03




1




1





@markkirby I like your sportsman soul friend , I'm going to remove that paragraph as you wish

– Maythux
Jul 1 '15 at 8:05





@markkirby I like your sportsman soul friend , I'm going to remove that paragraph as you wish

– Maythux
Jul 1 '15 at 8:05










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















9














This was extracted from another answer here:




Zint is an open source Linux barcode generator which allows you
to encode data in over 30 types of barcode symbol. In this
documentation a barcode encoding method is termed a symbology and the
resulting barcode image is termed a symbol. The symbologies currently
supported by Zint are: Code 11, Standard Code 2 of 5, IATA Code 2 of
5, Industrial Code 2 of 5, Interleaved Code 2 of 5, Code 2 of 5 Data
Logic, ITF-14, Deutche Post Leitcode, Deutche Post Identcode, UPC-A,
UPC-E, EAN-2, EAN-5, EAN-8, EAN-13, UK Plessey, MSI Plessey, Telepen
Alpha, Telepen Numeric, Code 39, Extended Code 39, Code 93, PZN,
LOGMARS, Codabar, Pharmacode, Code 128, GS1-128, NVE-18, GS1 DataBar,
DataBar-14, DataBar Limited, DataBar Extended, Code 16k, PDF417,
MicroPDF417, Two-Track Pharmacode, PostNet, PLANET, Australia Post
4-State Symbols, RM4SCC, USPS OneCode, Data Matrix, QR Code, Maxicode,
Composite Symbols, FIM and Flattermarken. In addition Zint also
provides barcode stacking, colour options and a verification stage for
SBN, ISBN and ISBN-13 data. The aim of the Zint project is to provide
an open source API for encoding all public domain barcode symbologies




Zint also has a GUI, and if you have the qt4 libraries installed when you compile it it will build and install. It can then be run with zint-qt. You should read the INSTALL file in the source code tarball from SourceForge to know more about building the software.





This was initially posted as part of an answer by mark kirby, and was initially grabbed from here. It was extracted and put here in its own answer at the request of the OP because they're picky about "No CLI Solutions" being in the answer they accept. It is not a Community Wiki because I've added the additional prereqs and information about the GUI program that the software can contain/install/build






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:16



















17














Here is a selection of Unix & Linux Barcode Programs I found.



These programs are CLI only, OP requested GUI



GNU-barcode



GNU Barcode is a tool to convert text strings to printed bars. It supports a variety of standard codes to represent the textual strings and creates postscript output.



Main features of GNU Barcode:




  • Available as both a library and an executable program

  • Supports UPC, EAN, ISBN, CODE39 and other encoding standards

  • Postscript and Encapsulated Postscript output

  • Accepts sizes and positions as inches, centimeters, millimeters

  • Can create tables of barcodes (to print labels on sticker pages)


DATHO



Features



Availabe types of barcodes:
EAN13 and EAN8, EAN128, UPCa and UPCe, addon code 2- and 5-digit, Code39, Code93, CODE128, Interleaved 2 of 5, Industrial, Matrix, Codabar. Code 11, PZN, DBP-Barcodes




  • horizontal and vertikal output

  • automatic checksum-calculation

  • different module sizes

  • line with text in clear

  • barcode and text in one line (= banding with matrix- and
    PCL3-printer)


iXBC



The central software solution for bar code printing from SAP.
iXBC is the ideal barcode print supplement to SAP R/3 and mySAP for all SAP printing possibilities:



Direct printing from server - with nativ PCL or Postscript device from UNIX and Windows
Indirect printing - with SAPWIN device



Direct printing from server



You install it only once on the server and all PCL and PostScript printers on the network are immediately able to print barcodes - without hardware plugin in each printer and without middleware. AGOSYS offers this solution since 1998, as the world's first.



Product variants:




  • iXBCserver for UNIX Platforms

  • AIX

  • HP-UX

  • Linux

  • Solaris

  • Tru-64

  • iXBCwin for all Windows Platforms


All usual 1D and 2D Barcode types




  • Code39

  • 2of5 Interleaved

  • Code128 A/B/C/Auto

  • Codabar

  • EAN128

  • UCC128 EAN8/13

  • UPC A/E

  • PDF417

  • DataMatrix

  • OCR-B Font


On-Tap/UNIX



On-Tap VMS or UNIX bar coding software runs as a stand alone program and directly translates (filters) your text into bar codes. Once On-Tap has bar coded your file, you can send it to any printer anywhere within your network.



On-Tap lets you print VMS or UNIX bar codes from within your existing applications in minutes. Simply place a special trigger character before and after the information you'd like to bar code. When you print, bar codes will appear in place of the information you've marked. It even lets you change the trigger characters and control the spacing around each bar code. No other bar code software has these flexible features.



Barcode studio



Barcode Studio is the ideal tool for barcode design and bar code creation. This barcode maker software supports all common linear codes, all 2D-Codes, GS1-DataBar/RSS and Composite Codes. Barcode Studio prints the bar codes on arbitrary printers or exports them as image.



libdmtx



Site was offline for maintenance, will add description later



Zint



A barcode encoding library supporting over 50 symbologies including Code
128, Data Matrix, USPS OneCode, EAN-128, UPC/EAN, ITF, QR Code, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, LOGMARS, Maxicode, GS1 DataBar, Aztec, Composite Symbols and more.



Zint has a GUI, thanks to user @Thomas W.



Follow its build and install guides.
When done, run:



zint-qt 


with an & at the end (to fork it to the background)



As a small extra, here is a libre office barcode plug in



Barcode



A simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN,
Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer


























  • Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:21











  • @Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27











  • @Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

    – Mark Kirby
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27













  • @ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:30






  • 1





    @markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:12



















5














I use Barcode extension for LibreOffice. Barcode is a simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN, Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer
























  • Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:14











  • I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

    – Mitch
    Jun 30 '15 at 15:25



















0














I use this simple to enconde and decode: QtQR






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    broken link, not detailed at all

    – adadion
    Mar 21 at 7:29











  • Now is fixed. Thanks.

    – Antonio Feitosa
    3 hours ago












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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














This was extracted from another answer here:




Zint is an open source Linux barcode generator which allows you
to encode data in over 30 types of barcode symbol. In this
documentation a barcode encoding method is termed a symbology and the
resulting barcode image is termed a symbol. The symbologies currently
supported by Zint are: Code 11, Standard Code 2 of 5, IATA Code 2 of
5, Industrial Code 2 of 5, Interleaved Code 2 of 5, Code 2 of 5 Data
Logic, ITF-14, Deutche Post Leitcode, Deutche Post Identcode, UPC-A,
UPC-E, EAN-2, EAN-5, EAN-8, EAN-13, UK Plessey, MSI Plessey, Telepen
Alpha, Telepen Numeric, Code 39, Extended Code 39, Code 93, PZN,
LOGMARS, Codabar, Pharmacode, Code 128, GS1-128, NVE-18, GS1 DataBar,
DataBar-14, DataBar Limited, DataBar Extended, Code 16k, PDF417,
MicroPDF417, Two-Track Pharmacode, PostNet, PLANET, Australia Post
4-State Symbols, RM4SCC, USPS OneCode, Data Matrix, QR Code, Maxicode,
Composite Symbols, FIM and Flattermarken. In addition Zint also
provides barcode stacking, colour options and a verification stage for
SBN, ISBN and ISBN-13 data. The aim of the Zint project is to provide
an open source API for encoding all public domain barcode symbologies




Zint also has a GUI, and if you have the qt4 libraries installed when you compile it it will build and install. It can then be run with zint-qt. You should read the INSTALL file in the source code tarball from SourceForge to know more about building the software.





This was initially posted as part of an answer by mark kirby, and was initially grabbed from here. It was extracted and put here in its own answer at the request of the OP because they're picky about "No CLI Solutions" being in the answer they accept. It is not a Community Wiki because I've added the additional prereqs and information about the GUI program that the software can contain/install/build






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:16
















9














This was extracted from another answer here:




Zint is an open source Linux barcode generator which allows you
to encode data in over 30 types of barcode symbol. In this
documentation a barcode encoding method is termed a symbology and the
resulting barcode image is termed a symbol. The symbologies currently
supported by Zint are: Code 11, Standard Code 2 of 5, IATA Code 2 of
5, Industrial Code 2 of 5, Interleaved Code 2 of 5, Code 2 of 5 Data
Logic, ITF-14, Deutche Post Leitcode, Deutche Post Identcode, UPC-A,
UPC-E, EAN-2, EAN-5, EAN-8, EAN-13, UK Plessey, MSI Plessey, Telepen
Alpha, Telepen Numeric, Code 39, Extended Code 39, Code 93, PZN,
LOGMARS, Codabar, Pharmacode, Code 128, GS1-128, NVE-18, GS1 DataBar,
DataBar-14, DataBar Limited, DataBar Extended, Code 16k, PDF417,
MicroPDF417, Two-Track Pharmacode, PostNet, PLANET, Australia Post
4-State Symbols, RM4SCC, USPS OneCode, Data Matrix, QR Code, Maxicode,
Composite Symbols, FIM and Flattermarken. In addition Zint also
provides barcode stacking, colour options and a verification stage for
SBN, ISBN and ISBN-13 data. The aim of the Zint project is to provide
an open source API for encoding all public domain barcode symbologies




Zint also has a GUI, and if you have the qt4 libraries installed when you compile it it will build and install. It can then be run with zint-qt. You should read the INSTALL file in the source code tarball from SourceForge to know more about building the software.





This was initially posted as part of an answer by mark kirby, and was initially grabbed from here. It was extracted and put here in its own answer at the request of the OP because they're picky about "No CLI Solutions" being in the answer they accept. It is not a Community Wiki because I've added the additional prereqs and information about the GUI program that the software can contain/install/build






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:16














9












9








9







This was extracted from another answer here:




Zint is an open source Linux barcode generator which allows you
to encode data in over 30 types of barcode symbol. In this
documentation a barcode encoding method is termed a symbology and the
resulting barcode image is termed a symbol. The symbologies currently
supported by Zint are: Code 11, Standard Code 2 of 5, IATA Code 2 of
5, Industrial Code 2 of 5, Interleaved Code 2 of 5, Code 2 of 5 Data
Logic, ITF-14, Deutche Post Leitcode, Deutche Post Identcode, UPC-A,
UPC-E, EAN-2, EAN-5, EAN-8, EAN-13, UK Plessey, MSI Plessey, Telepen
Alpha, Telepen Numeric, Code 39, Extended Code 39, Code 93, PZN,
LOGMARS, Codabar, Pharmacode, Code 128, GS1-128, NVE-18, GS1 DataBar,
DataBar-14, DataBar Limited, DataBar Extended, Code 16k, PDF417,
MicroPDF417, Two-Track Pharmacode, PostNet, PLANET, Australia Post
4-State Symbols, RM4SCC, USPS OneCode, Data Matrix, QR Code, Maxicode,
Composite Symbols, FIM and Flattermarken. In addition Zint also
provides barcode stacking, colour options and a verification stage for
SBN, ISBN and ISBN-13 data. The aim of the Zint project is to provide
an open source API for encoding all public domain barcode symbologies




Zint also has a GUI, and if you have the qt4 libraries installed when you compile it it will build and install. It can then be run with zint-qt. You should read the INSTALL file in the source code tarball from SourceForge to know more about building the software.





This was initially posted as part of an answer by mark kirby, and was initially grabbed from here. It was extracted and put here in its own answer at the request of the OP because they're picky about "No CLI Solutions" being in the answer they accept. It is not a Community Wiki because I've added the additional prereqs and information about the GUI program that the software can contain/install/build






share|improve this answer















This was extracted from another answer here:




Zint is an open source Linux barcode generator which allows you
to encode data in over 30 types of barcode symbol. In this
documentation a barcode encoding method is termed a symbology and the
resulting barcode image is termed a symbol. The symbologies currently
supported by Zint are: Code 11, Standard Code 2 of 5, IATA Code 2 of
5, Industrial Code 2 of 5, Interleaved Code 2 of 5, Code 2 of 5 Data
Logic, ITF-14, Deutche Post Leitcode, Deutche Post Identcode, UPC-A,
UPC-E, EAN-2, EAN-5, EAN-8, EAN-13, UK Plessey, MSI Plessey, Telepen
Alpha, Telepen Numeric, Code 39, Extended Code 39, Code 93, PZN,
LOGMARS, Codabar, Pharmacode, Code 128, GS1-128, NVE-18, GS1 DataBar,
DataBar-14, DataBar Limited, DataBar Extended, Code 16k, PDF417,
MicroPDF417, Two-Track Pharmacode, PostNet, PLANET, Australia Post
4-State Symbols, RM4SCC, USPS OneCode, Data Matrix, QR Code, Maxicode,
Composite Symbols, FIM and Flattermarken. In addition Zint also
provides barcode stacking, colour options and a verification stage for
SBN, ISBN and ISBN-13 data. The aim of the Zint project is to provide
an open source API for encoding all public domain barcode symbologies




Zint also has a GUI, and if you have the qt4 libraries installed when you compile it it will build and install. It can then be run with zint-qt. You should read the INSTALL file in the source code tarball from SourceForge to know more about building the software.





This was initially posted as part of an answer by mark kirby, and was initially grabbed from here. It was extracted and put here in its own answer at the request of the OP because they're picky about "No CLI Solutions" being in the answer they accept. It is not a Community Wiki because I've added the additional prereqs and information about the GUI program that the software can contain/install/build







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24









Community

1




1










answered Jun 30 '15 at 14:12









Thomas WardThomas Ward

45.4k23125178




45.4k23125178








  • 4





    If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:16














  • 4





    If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:16








4




4





If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

– Thomas Ward
Jun 30 '15 at 14:16





If you upvote this answer, please also upvote mark kirby's answer to this question as well as I only extracted a tidbit from his answer, and he did all the research (and deserves all the credit)

– Thomas Ward
Jun 30 '15 at 14:16













17














Here is a selection of Unix & Linux Barcode Programs I found.



These programs are CLI only, OP requested GUI



GNU-barcode



GNU Barcode is a tool to convert text strings to printed bars. It supports a variety of standard codes to represent the textual strings and creates postscript output.



Main features of GNU Barcode:




  • Available as both a library and an executable program

  • Supports UPC, EAN, ISBN, CODE39 and other encoding standards

  • Postscript and Encapsulated Postscript output

  • Accepts sizes and positions as inches, centimeters, millimeters

  • Can create tables of barcodes (to print labels on sticker pages)


DATHO



Features



Availabe types of barcodes:
EAN13 and EAN8, EAN128, UPCa and UPCe, addon code 2- and 5-digit, Code39, Code93, CODE128, Interleaved 2 of 5, Industrial, Matrix, Codabar. Code 11, PZN, DBP-Barcodes




  • horizontal and vertikal output

  • automatic checksum-calculation

  • different module sizes

  • line with text in clear

  • barcode and text in one line (= banding with matrix- and
    PCL3-printer)


iXBC



The central software solution for bar code printing from SAP.
iXBC is the ideal barcode print supplement to SAP R/3 and mySAP for all SAP printing possibilities:



Direct printing from server - with nativ PCL or Postscript device from UNIX and Windows
Indirect printing - with SAPWIN device



Direct printing from server



You install it only once on the server and all PCL and PostScript printers on the network are immediately able to print barcodes - without hardware plugin in each printer and without middleware. AGOSYS offers this solution since 1998, as the world's first.



Product variants:




  • iXBCserver for UNIX Platforms

  • AIX

  • HP-UX

  • Linux

  • Solaris

  • Tru-64

  • iXBCwin for all Windows Platforms


All usual 1D and 2D Barcode types




  • Code39

  • 2of5 Interleaved

  • Code128 A/B/C/Auto

  • Codabar

  • EAN128

  • UCC128 EAN8/13

  • UPC A/E

  • PDF417

  • DataMatrix

  • OCR-B Font


On-Tap/UNIX



On-Tap VMS or UNIX bar coding software runs as a stand alone program and directly translates (filters) your text into bar codes. Once On-Tap has bar coded your file, you can send it to any printer anywhere within your network.



On-Tap lets you print VMS or UNIX bar codes from within your existing applications in minutes. Simply place a special trigger character before and after the information you'd like to bar code. When you print, bar codes will appear in place of the information you've marked. It even lets you change the trigger characters and control the spacing around each bar code. No other bar code software has these flexible features.



Barcode studio



Barcode Studio is the ideal tool for barcode design and bar code creation. This barcode maker software supports all common linear codes, all 2D-Codes, GS1-DataBar/RSS and Composite Codes. Barcode Studio prints the bar codes on arbitrary printers or exports them as image.



libdmtx



Site was offline for maintenance, will add description later



Zint



A barcode encoding library supporting over 50 symbologies including Code
128, Data Matrix, USPS OneCode, EAN-128, UPC/EAN, ITF, QR Code, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, LOGMARS, Maxicode, GS1 DataBar, Aztec, Composite Symbols and more.



Zint has a GUI, thanks to user @Thomas W.



Follow its build and install guides.
When done, run:



zint-qt 


with an & at the end (to fork it to the background)



As a small extra, here is a libre office barcode plug in



Barcode



A simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN,
Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer


























  • Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:21











  • @Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27











  • @Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

    – Mark Kirby
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27













  • @ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:30






  • 1





    @markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:12
















17














Here is a selection of Unix & Linux Barcode Programs I found.



These programs are CLI only, OP requested GUI



GNU-barcode



GNU Barcode is a tool to convert text strings to printed bars. It supports a variety of standard codes to represent the textual strings and creates postscript output.



Main features of GNU Barcode:




  • Available as both a library and an executable program

  • Supports UPC, EAN, ISBN, CODE39 and other encoding standards

  • Postscript and Encapsulated Postscript output

  • Accepts sizes and positions as inches, centimeters, millimeters

  • Can create tables of barcodes (to print labels on sticker pages)


DATHO



Features



Availabe types of barcodes:
EAN13 and EAN8, EAN128, UPCa and UPCe, addon code 2- and 5-digit, Code39, Code93, CODE128, Interleaved 2 of 5, Industrial, Matrix, Codabar. Code 11, PZN, DBP-Barcodes




  • horizontal and vertikal output

  • automatic checksum-calculation

  • different module sizes

  • line with text in clear

  • barcode and text in one line (= banding with matrix- and
    PCL3-printer)


iXBC



The central software solution for bar code printing from SAP.
iXBC is the ideal barcode print supplement to SAP R/3 and mySAP for all SAP printing possibilities:



Direct printing from server - with nativ PCL or Postscript device from UNIX and Windows
Indirect printing - with SAPWIN device



Direct printing from server



You install it only once on the server and all PCL and PostScript printers on the network are immediately able to print barcodes - without hardware plugin in each printer and without middleware. AGOSYS offers this solution since 1998, as the world's first.



Product variants:




  • iXBCserver for UNIX Platforms

  • AIX

  • HP-UX

  • Linux

  • Solaris

  • Tru-64

  • iXBCwin for all Windows Platforms


All usual 1D and 2D Barcode types




  • Code39

  • 2of5 Interleaved

  • Code128 A/B/C/Auto

  • Codabar

  • EAN128

  • UCC128 EAN8/13

  • UPC A/E

  • PDF417

  • DataMatrix

  • OCR-B Font


On-Tap/UNIX



On-Tap VMS or UNIX bar coding software runs as a stand alone program and directly translates (filters) your text into bar codes. Once On-Tap has bar coded your file, you can send it to any printer anywhere within your network.



On-Tap lets you print VMS or UNIX bar codes from within your existing applications in minutes. Simply place a special trigger character before and after the information you'd like to bar code. When you print, bar codes will appear in place of the information you've marked. It even lets you change the trigger characters and control the spacing around each bar code. No other bar code software has these flexible features.



Barcode studio



Barcode Studio is the ideal tool for barcode design and bar code creation. This barcode maker software supports all common linear codes, all 2D-Codes, GS1-DataBar/RSS and Composite Codes. Barcode Studio prints the bar codes on arbitrary printers or exports them as image.



libdmtx



Site was offline for maintenance, will add description later



Zint



A barcode encoding library supporting over 50 symbologies including Code
128, Data Matrix, USPS OneCode, EAN-128, UPC/EAN, ITF, QR Code, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, LOGMARS, Maxicode, GS1 DataBar, Aztec, Composite Symbols and more.



Zint has a GUI, thanks to user @Thomas W.



Follow its build and install guides.
When done, run:



zint-qt 


with an & at the end (to fork it to the background)



As a small extra, here is a libre office barcode plug in



Barcode



A simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN,
Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer


























  • Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:21











  • @Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27











  • @Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

    – Mark Kirby
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27













  • @ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:30






  • 1





    @markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:12














17












17








17







Here is a selection of Unix & Linux Barcode Programs I found.



These programs are CLI only, OP requested GUI



GNU-barcode



GNU Barcode is a tool to convert text strings to printed bars. It supports a variety of standard codes to represent the textual strings and creates postscript output.



Main features of GNU Barcode:




  • Available as both a library and an executable program

  • Supports UPC, EAN, ISBN, CODE39 and other encoding standards

  • Postscript and Encapsulated Postscript output

  • Accepts sizes and positions as inches, centimeters, millimeters

  • Can create tables of barcodes (to print labels on sticker pages)


DATHO



Features



Availabe types of barcodes:
EAN13 and EAN8, EAN128, UPCa and UPCe, addon code 2- and 5-digit, Code39, Code93, CODE128, Interleaved 2 of 5, Industrial, Matrix, Codabar. Code 11, PZN, DBP-Barcodes




  • horizontal and vertikal output

  • automatic checksum-calculation

  • different module sizes

  • line with text in clear

  • barcode and text in one line (= banding with matrix- and
    PCL3-printer)


iXBC



The central software solution for bar code printing from SAP.
iXBC is the ideal barcode print supplement to SAP R/3 and mySAP for all SAP printing possibilities:



Direct printing from server - with nativ PCL or Postscript device from UNIX and Windows
Indirect printing - with SAPWIN device



Direct printing from server



You install it only once on the server and all PCL and PostScript printers on the network are immediately able to print barcodes - without hardware plugin in each printer and without middleware. AGOSYS offers this solution since 1998, as the world's first.



Product variants:




  • iXBCserver for UNIX Platforms

  • AIX

  • HP-UX

  • Linux

  • Solaris

  • Tru-64

  • iXBCwin for all Windows Platforms


All usual 1D and 2D Barcode types




  • Code39

  • 2of5 Interleaved

  • Code128 A/B/C/Auto

  • Codabar

  • EAN128

  • UCC128 EAN8/13

  • UPC A/E

  • PDF417

  • DataMatrix

  • OCR-B Font


On-Tap/UNIX



On-Tap VMS or UNIX bar coding software runs as a stand alone program and directly translates (filters) your text into bar codes. Once On-Tap has bar coded your file, you can send it to any printer anywhere within your network.



On-Tap lets you print VMS or UNIX bar codes from within your existing applications in minutes. Simply place a special trigger character before and after the information you'd like to bar code. When you print, bar codes will appear in place of the information you've marked. It even lets you change the trigger characters and control the spacing around each bar code. No other bar code software has these flexible features.



Barcode studio



Barcode Studio is the ideal tool for barcode design and bar code creation. This barcode maker software supports all common linear codes, all 2D-Codes, GS1-DataBar/RSS and Composite Codes. Barcode Studio prints the bar codes on arbitrary printers or exports them as image.



libdmtx



Site was offline for maintenance, will add description later



Zint



A barcode encoding library supporting over 50 symbologies including Code
128, Data Matrix, USPS OneCode, EAN-128, UPC/EAN, ITF, QR Code, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, LOGMARS, Maxicode, GS1 DataBar, Aztec, Composite Symbols and more.



Zint has a GUI, thanks to user @Thomas W.



Follow its build and install guides.
When done, run:



zint-qt 


with an & at the end (to fork it to the background)



As a small extra, here is a libre office barcode plug in



Barcode



A simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN,
Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer















Here is a selection of Unix & Linux Barcode Programs I found.



These programs are CLI only, OP requested GUI



GNU-barcode



GNU Barcode is a tool to convert text strings to printed bars. It supports a variety of standard codes to represent the textual strings and creates postscript output.



Main features of GNU Barcode:




  • Available as both a library and an executable program

  • Supports UPC, EAN, ISBN, CODE39 and other encoding standards

  • Postscript and Encapsulated Postscript output

  • Accepts sizes and positions as inches, centimeters, millimeters

  • Can create tables of barcodes (to print labels on sticker pages)


DATHO



Features



Availabe types of barcodes:
EAN13 and EAN8, EAN128, UPCa and UPCe, addon code 2- and 5-digit, Code39, Code93, CODE128, Interleaved 2 of 5, Industrial, Matrix, Codabar. Code 11, PZN, DBP-Barcodes




  • horizontal and vertikal output

  • automatic checksum-calculation

  • different module sizes

  • line with text in clear

  • barcode and text in one line (= banding with matrix- and
    PCL3-printer)


iXBC



The central software solution for bar code printing from SAP.
iXBC is the ideal barcode print supplement to SAP R/3 and mySAP for all SAP printing possibilities:



Direct printing from server - with nativ PCL or Postscript device from UNIX and Windows
Indirect printing - with SAPWIN device



Direct printing from server



You install it only once on the server and all PCL and PostScript printers on the network are immediately able to print barcodes - without hardware plugin in each printer and without middleware. AGOSYS offers this solution since 1998, as the world's first.



Product variants:




  • iXBCserver for UNIX Platforms

  • AIX

  • HP-UX

  • Linux

  • Solaris

  • Tru-64

  • iXBCwin for all Windows Platforms


All usual 1D and 2D Barcode types




  • Code39

  • 2of5 Interleaved

  • Code128 A/B/C/Auto

  • Codabar

  • EAN128

  • UCC128 EAN8/13

  • UPC A/E

  • PDF417

  • DataMatrix

  • OCR-B Font


On-Tap/UNIX



On-Tap VMS or UNIX bar coding software runs as a stand alone program and directly translates (filters) your text into bar codes. Once On-Tap has bar coded your file, you can send it to any printer anywhere within your network.



On-Tap lets you print VMS or UNIX bar codes from within your existing applications in minutes. Simply place a special trigger character before and after the information you'd like to bar code. When you print, bar codes will appear in place of the information you've marked. It even lets you change the trigger characters and control the spacing around each bar code. No other bar code software has these flexible features.



Barcode studio



Barcode Studio is the ideal tool for barcode design and bar code creation. This barcode maker software supports all common linear codes, all 2D-Codes, GS1-DataBar/RSS and Composite Codes. Barcode Studio prints the bar codes on arbitrary printers or exports them as image.



libdmtx



Site was offline for maintenance, will add description later



Zint



A barcode encoding library supporting over 50 symbologies including Code
128, Data Matrix, USPS OneCode, EAN-128, UPC/EAN, ITF, QR Code, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, LOGMARS, Maxicode, GS1 DataBar, Aztec, Composite Symbols and more.



Zint has a GUI, thanks to user @Thomas W.



Follow its build and install guides.
When done, run:



zint-qt 


with an & at the end (to fork it to the background)



As a small extra, here is a libre office barcode plug in



Barcode



A simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN,
Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 20 '16 at 20:55









Roadowl

1032




1032










answered Jun 30 '15 at 11:01









Mark KirbyMark Kirby

14.3k146398




14.3k146398













  • Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:21











  • @Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27











  • @Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

    – Mark Kirby
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27













  • @ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:30






  • 1





    @markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:12



















  • Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:21











  • @Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27











  • @Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

    – Mark Kirby
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:27













  • @ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:30






  • 1





    @markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

    – Thomas Ward
    Jun 30 '15 at 14:12

















Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

– Maythux
Jun 30 '15 at 12:21





Indeed no one of what you list above meets my need, all of them is CLI unless the libreoffice extension which is not so useful in my case.

– Maythux
Jun 30 '15 at 12:21













@Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

– Thomas Ward
Jun 30 '15 at 12:27





@Maythux um... Zint has a GUI you just need the qt4 libraries present at compile time

– Thomas Ward
Jun 30 '15 at 12:27













@Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

– Mark Kirby
Jun 30 '15 at 12:27







@Maythux I also found this, it is gui but says for QR code and I have no means of testings, so will just leave a comment for now, It is in repos sudo apt-get install grencode but says you need this .deb for GUI launchpad.net/qr-code-creator Also info page erickjohncuevas.com/news/… Could be usefull

– Mark Kirby
Jun 30 '15 at 12:27















@ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

– Maythux
Jun 30 '15 at 12:30





@ThomasW. I already installed it few hours ago but I didn't recognize such thing! How can I have it?

– Maythux
Jun 30 '15 at 12:30




1




1





@markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

– Thomas Ward
Jun 30 '15 at 14:12





@markkirby My apologies for snipping from your answer, but I gave a note that I also extracted it from your answer here.

– Thomas Ward
Jun 30 '15 at 14:12











5














I use Barcode extension for LibreOffice. Barcode is a simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN, Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer
























  • Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:14











  • I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

    – Mitch
    Jun 30 '15 at 15:25
















5














I use Barcode extension for LibreOffice. Barcode is a simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN, Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer
























  • Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:14











  • I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

    – Mitch
    Jun 30 '15 at 15:25














5












5








5







I use Barcode extension for LibreOffice. Barcode is a simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN, Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.






share|improve this answer













I use Barcode extension for LibreOffice. Barcode is a simple extension for creating UPC-A, EAN-13, ISBN, JAN, Bookland Standard 2of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, Code128 barcodes in LibreOffice Draw.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jun 30 '15 at 11:02









MitchMitch

85.8k14174232




85.8k14174232













  • Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:14











  • I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

    – Mitch
    Jun 30 '15 at 15:25



















  • Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

    – Maythux
    Jun 30 '15 at 12:14











  • I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

    – Mitch
    Jun 30 '15 at 15:25

















Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

– Maythux
Jun 30 '15 at 12:14





Isn't there a native app for this instead of using Libreoffice extension?!

– Maythux
Jun 30 '15 at 12:14













I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

– Mitch
Jun 30 '15 at 15:25





I believe its Barcode, but its cli.

– Mitch
Jun 30 '15 at 15:25











0














I use this simple to enconde and decode: QtQR






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    broken link, not detailed at all

    – adadion
    Mar 21 at 7:29











  • Now is fixed. Thanks.

    – Antonio Feitosa
    3 hours ago
















0














I use this simple to enconde and decode: QtQR






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    broken link, not detailed at all

    – adadion
    Mar 21 at 7:29











  • Now is fixed. Thanks.

    – Antonio Feitosa
    3 hours ago














0












0








0







I use this simple to enconde and decode: QtQR






share|improve this answer















I use this simple to enconde and decode: QtQR







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago

























answered Feb 28 '17 at 20:51









Antonio FeitosaAntonio Feitosa

73168




73168








  • 1





    broken link, not detailed at all

    – adadion
    Mar 21 at 7:29











  • Now is fixed. Thanks.

    – Antonio Feitosa
    3 hours ago














  • 1





    broken link, not detailed at all

    – adadion
    Mar 21 at 7:29











  • Now is fixed. Thanks.

    – Antonio Feitosa
    3 hours ago








1




1





broken link, not detailed at all

– adadion
Mar 21 at 7:29





broken link, not detailed at all

– adadion
Mar 21 at 7:29













Now is fixed. Thanks.

– Antonio Feitosa
3 hours ago





Now is fixed. Thanks.

– Antonio Feitosa
3 hours ago


















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