Jonathan Druart
017699c345
Mainly a perl -p -i -e 's/^.*3.07.00.049.*\n//' **/*.pm Then some adjustements Signed-off-by: Josef Moravec <josef.moravec@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tomas Cohen Arazi <tomascohen@unc.edu.ar> Signed-off-by: Brendan A Gallagher <brendan@bywatersolutions.com>
284 lines
8.9 KiB
Perl
284 lines
8.9 KiB
Perl
package C4::Barcodes;
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# Copyright 2008 LibLime
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#
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# This file is part of Koha.
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#
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# Koha is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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#
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# Koha is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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#
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with Koha; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses>.
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use strict;
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use warnings;
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use Carp;
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use C4::Context;
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use C4::Debug;
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use C4::Barcodes::hbyymmincr;
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use C4::Barcodes::annual;
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use C4::Barcodes::incremental;
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use C4::Barcodes::EAN13;
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use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK %EXPORT_TAGS);
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use vars qw($debug $cgi_debug); # from C4::Debug, of course
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use vars qw($max $prefformat);
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BEGIN {
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require Exporter;
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@ISA = qw(Exporter);
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@EXPORT_OK = qw();
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}
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sub _prefformat {
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unless (defined $prefformat) {
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unless ($prefformat = C4::Context->preference('autoBarcode')) {
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carp "The autoBarcode syspref is missing/undefined. Assuming 'incremental'.";
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$prefformat = 'incremental';
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}
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}
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return $prefformat;
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}
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sub initial {
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return '0000001';
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}
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sub width {
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return;
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}
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sub process_head { # (self,head,whole,specific)
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my $self = shift;
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return shift; # Default: just return the head unchanged.
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}
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sub process_tail { # (self,tail,whole,specific)
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my $self = shift;
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return shift; # Default: just return the tail unchanged.
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}
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sub is_max {
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my $self = shift;
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ref($self) or carp "Called is_max on a non-object: '$self'";
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(@_) and $self->{is_max} = shift;
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return $self->{is_max} || 0;
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}
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sub value {
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my $self = shift;
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if (@_) {
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my $value = shift;
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if (defined $value) {
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$debug and print STDERR " setting barcode value to $value\n";
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} else {
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warn "Error: UNDEF argument to value";
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}
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$self->{value} = $value;
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}
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return $self->{value};
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}
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sub autoBarcode {
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(@_) or return _prefformat;
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my $self = shift;
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my $value = $self->{autoBarcode} or return _prefformat;
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$value =~ s/^.*:://; # in case we get C4::Barcodes::incremental, we just want 'incremental'
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return $value;
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}
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sub parse { # return 3 parts of barcode: non-incrementing, incrementing, non-incrementing
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my $self = shift;
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my $barcode = (@_) ? shift : $self->value;
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unless ($barcode =~ /(.*?)(\d+)$/) { # non-greedy match in first part
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carp "Barcode '$barcode' has no incrementing part!";
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return ($barcode,undef,undef);
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}
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$debug and warn "Barcode '$barcode' parses into: '$1', '$2', ''";
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return ($1,$2,''); # the third part is in anticipation of barcodes that include checkdigits
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}
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sub max {
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my $self = shift;
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if ($self->{is_max}) {
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$debug and print STDERR "max taken from Barcodes value $self->value\n";
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return $self->value;
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}
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$debug and print STDERR "Retrieving max database query.\n";
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return $self->db_max;
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}
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sub db_max {
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my $self = shift;
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my $query = "SELECT max(abs(barcode)) FROM items LIMIT 1"; # Possible problem if multiple barcode types populated
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my $sth = C4::Context->dbh->prepare($query);
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$sth->execute();
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return $sth->fetchrow_array || $self->initial;
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}
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sub next_value {
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my $self = shift;
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my $specific = (scalar @_) ? 1 : 0;
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my $max = $specific ? shift : $self->max; # optional argument, i.e. next_value after X
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unless ($max) {
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warn "No max barcode ($self->autoBarcode format) found. Using initial value.";
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return $self->initial;
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}
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$debug and print STDERR "(current) max barcode found: $max\n";
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my ($head,$incr,$tail) = $self->parse($max); # for incremental, you'd get ('',the_whole_barcode,'')
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unless (defined $incr) {
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warn "No incrementing part of barcode ($max) returned by parse.";
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return;
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}
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my $x = length($incr); # number of digits
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$incr =~ /^9+$/ and $x++; # if they're all 9's, we need an extra.
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# Note, this enlargement might be undesirable for some barcode formats.
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# Those should override next_value() to work accordingly.
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$incr++;
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$debug and warn "$incr";
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$head = $self->process_head($head,$max,$specific);
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$tail = $self->process_tail($tail,$incr,$specific); # XXX use $incr and not $max!
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my $next_value = $head . $incr . $tail;
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$debug and print STDERR "( next ) max barcode found: $next_value\n";
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return $next_value;
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}
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sub next {
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my $self = shift or return;
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(@_) and $self->{next} = shift;
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return $self->{next};
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}
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sub previous {
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my $self = shift or return;
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(@_) and $self->{previous} = shift;
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return $self->{previous};
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}
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sub serial {
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my $self = shift or return;
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(@_) and $self->{serial} = shift;
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return $self->{serial};
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}
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sub default_self {
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(@_) or carp "default_self called with no argument. Reverting to _prefformat.";
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my $autoBarcode = (@_) ? shift : _prefformat;
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$autoBarcode =~ s/^.*:://; # in case we get C4::Barcodes::incremental, we just want 'incremental'
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return {
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is_max => 0,
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autoBarcode => $autoBarcode,
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value => undef,
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previous => undef,
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'next' => undef,
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serial => 1
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};
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}
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our $types = {
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annual => sub {C4::Barcodes::annual->new_object(@_); },
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incremental => sub {C4::Barcodes::incremental->new_object(@_);},
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hbyymmincr => sub {C4::Barcodes::hbyymmincr->new_object(@_); },
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OFF => sub {C4::Barcodes::OFF->new_object(@_); },
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EAN13 => sub {C4::Barcodes::EAN13->new_object(@_); },
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};
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sub new {
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my $class_or_object = shift;
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my $type = ref($class_or_object) || $class_or_object;
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my $from_obj = ref($class_or_object) ? 1 : 0; # are we building off another Barcodes object?
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if ($from_obj) {
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$debug and print STDERR "Building new(@_) from old Barcodes object\n";
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}
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my $autoBarcodeType = (@_) ? shift : $from_obj ? $class_or_object->autoBarcode : _prefformat;
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$autoBarcodeType =~ s/^.*:://; # in case we get C4::Barcodes::incremental, we just want 'incremental'
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unless ($autoBarcodeType) {
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carp "No autoBarcode format found.";
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return;
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}
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unless (defined $types->{$autoBarcodeType}) {
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carp "The autoBarcode format '$autoBarcodeType' is unrecognized.";
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return;
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}
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carp "autoBarcode format = $autoBarcodeType" if $debug;
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my $self;
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if ($autoBarcodeType eq 'OFF') {
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$self = $class_or_object->default_self($autoBarcodeType);
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return bless $self, $class_or_object;
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} elsif ($from_obj) {
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$class_or_object->autoBarcode eq $autoBarcodeType
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or carp "Cannot create Barcodes object (type '$autoBarcodeType') from " . $class_or_object->autoBarcode . " object!";
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$self = $class_or_object->new_object(@_);
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$self->serial($class_or_object->serial + 1);
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if ($class_or_object->is_max) {
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$debug and print STDERR "old object was max: ", $class_or_object->value, "\n";
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$self->previous($class_or_object);
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$class_or_object->next($self);
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$self->value($self->next_value($class_or_object->value));
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$self->is_max(1) and $class_or_object->is_max(0); # new object is max, old object is no longer max
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} else {
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$self->value($self->next_value);
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}
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} else {
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$debug and print STDERR "trying to create new $autoBarcodeType\n";
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$self = &{$types->{$autoBarcodeType}} (@_);
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$self->value($self->next_value) and $self->is_max(1);
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$self->serial(1);
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}
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if ($self) {
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return $self;
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}
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carp "Failed new C4::Barcodes::$autoBarcodeType";
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return;
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}
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sub new_object {
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my $class_or_object = shift;
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my $type = ref($class_or_object) || $class_or_object;
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my $from_obj = ref($class_or_object) ? 1 : 0; # are we building off another Barcodes object?
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my $self = $class_or_object->default_self($from_obj ? $class_or_object->autoBarcode : 'incremental');
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bless $self, $type;
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return $self;
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}
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1;
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__END__
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=head1 Barcodes
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Note that the object returned by new is actually of the type requested (or set by syspref).
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For example, C4::Barcodes::annual
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The specific C4::Barcodes::* modules correspond to the autoBarcode syspref values.
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The default behavior here in Barcodes should be essentially a more flexible version of "incremental".
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=head1 Adding New Barcode Types
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To add a new barcode format, a developer should:
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create a module in C4/Barcodes/, like C4/Barcodes/my_new_format.pm;
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add to the $types hashref in this file;
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add tests under the "t" directory; and
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edit autoBarcode syspref to include new type.
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=head2 Adding a new module
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Each new module that needs differing behavior must override these subs:
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new_object
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initial
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db_max
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parse
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Or else the CLASS subs will be used.
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=head2 $types hashref
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The hash referenced can be thought of as the constructor farm for all the C4::Barcodes types.
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Each value should be a reference to a sub that calls the module constructor.
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=head1 Notes
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You would think it might be easy to handle incremental barcodes, but in practice even commonly used values,
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like the IBM "Boulder" format can cause problems for sprintf. Basically, the value is too large for the
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%d version of an integer, and we cannot count on perl having been compiled with support for quads
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(64-bit integers). So we have to use floats or increment a piece of it and return the rejoined fragments.
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=cut
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