| QR Code provides the following features compared with conventional bar
codes. |
| High Capacity Encoding of Data |
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While conventional bar codes are
capable of storing a maximum of approximately 20 digits, QR Code
is capable of handling several dozen to several hundred times
more information.
QR Code is capable of handling all types of data,
such as numeric and alphabetic characters, Kanji, Kana, Hiragana,
symbols, binary, and control codes. Up to 7,089 characters can
be encoded in one symbol. |
| QR Code Data capacity |
| Numeric only |
Max. 7,089 characters |
| Alphanumeric |
Max. 4,296 characters |
| Binary (8 bits) |
Max. 2,953 bytes |
| Kanji, full-width Kana |
Max. 1,817 characters |
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A QR Code symbol of this size can encode 300 alphanumeric
characters. |
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| Dirt and Damage Resistant |
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| QR Code has error correction capability.
Data can be restored even if the symbol is partially
dirty or damaged. A maximum 30% of codewords*1 can
be restored*2. |
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*1: A codeword is a unit that constructs the data area. In the case of QR Code, one codeword is equal to 8 bits.
*2: Data restoration may not be fully performed depending on the amount of dirt or damage. |
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| Structured Append Feature |
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QR Code can be divided into multiple
data areas. Conversely, information stored in multiple QR Code
symbols can be reconstructed as single data symbols.
One data symbol can be divided into up to 16 symbols,
allowing printing in a narrow area. |
The same data can be read either from the upper
symbol or the lower four symbols. |
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