Leadtools.Barcode.Deprecated Namespace > BarcodeData Class : GetNextDuplicated Method |
'Usage Dim instance As BarcodeData Dim index As Integer Dim value As Integer value = instance.GetNextDuplicated(index)
function Leadtools.Barcode.Deprecated.BarcodeData.GetNextDuplicated( index )
LEADTOOLS provides a number of functions to let you work with duplicated barcodes. They let you:
To determine whether a barcode is duplicated, use the IsDuplicated property. If a barcode is duplicated, the DuplicatedIndex property will return the index of the first barcode in the array after the specified barcode, which is a duplicate of the specified barcode. The DuplicateCount property will get the total number of barcodes duplicated for the current barcode.
If you know the index of a barcode within an array, use the IndexDuplicate property to get the next instance of a duplicated barcode. Call the GetFirstDuplicatedIndex method to find the index of the first barcode in the array that is a duplicate of the barcode at the specified index. Call the GetNextDuplicated method to find the index of the next barcode in the array that is a duplicate of the barcode at the specified index.
As an example, assume a call to the BarcodeEngine.Read method is made to read ten barcodes in an array of BarcodeData. Suppose the BarcodeData.IsDuplicated property is called for the item at index 3 in the array, and TRUE is returned. This indicates one or more barcodes in the array are duplicates of the specified item. Calling the BarcodeData.GetFirstDuplicated method returns the index of the first barcode in the array that is a diplicate of the barcode at index 3 in the array. Suppose this value is 0. The barcode present at index zero in the array is the first duplicate of the barcode at index 3. Calling this method with the index set to 3 will return the index of the next barcode in the array that is a duplicate of the barcodes at index 0 and 3. Suppose this value is 9. This means the barcodes at index 0, index 3, and index 9 of the array are all duplicates.
To find out how many sets of barcodes are duplicated (for example, in an array of ten barcodes, the first, third, and fifth might be duplicates of each other, while the 4th, 8th and 9th are duplicates of a different barcode), use the following code:
VB
Private Function GetSetsCount(ByRef barcodeData As RasterCollection(Of BarcodeData)) As Integer Dim i As Integer Dim j As Integer Dim count As Integer Dim visited() As Boolean ReDim visited(barcodeData.Count) count = 0 For i = 0 To barcodeData.Count - 1 If visited(i) Then Continue For End If visited(i) = True count += 1 j = i While barcodeData(j).IndexDuplicate <> -1 And barcodeData(j).IndexDuplicate <> 255 j = barcodeData(j).IndexDuplicate visited(j) = True End While Next Return count End Function
C#
public int GetSetsCount(RasterCollection<BarcodeData> barcodeData) { int i, j, count; bool [] visited = new bool [barcodeData.Count]; count = 0; for (i = 0; i < barcodeData.Count; i++) { if (visited[i]) continue; visited[i] = true; count++; j = i; while (barcodeData[j].IndexDuplicate != -1 && barcodeData[j].IndexDuplicate != 255) { j = barcodeData[j].IndexDuplicate; visited[j] = true; } } return count; }
After this code is executed, count
will contain the number of different sets of barcodes.