5

What is the algorithm for converting a zero-suppressed, eight-digit GTIN-12 identifier (represented as a UPC-E barcode) into the full, twelve-digit version as shown in a UPC-A barcode?

4 Answers 4

15

The algorithm for converting a GTIN-12 identifier between UPC-E and UPC-A representation can be most clearly seen from the following pattern mapping:

SabcdeNX ⟺ SabN0000cdeX  :  0≤N≤2
Sabcde3X ⟺ Sabc00000deX
Sabcde4X ⟺ Sabcd00000eX
SabcdeNX ⟺ Sabcde0000NX  :  5≤N≤9

In the above S is the number system (either 0 or 1) and X is the check digit.

In pseudo-code it looks like this:

Input:  A valid eight-digit UPC-E: Assigned to E[]. 
Output: PASS: Twelve-digit UPC-A representing the UPC-E.
        FAIL: Reason.

if E[0] != {0-1} then FAIL: Invalid number system.

if E[6] == {0-2} then PASS: E[0..2] . E[6] . "0000"  . E[3..5] . E[7]
if E[6] == "3"   then PASS: E[0..3] .        "00000" . E[4..5] . E[7]
if E[6] == "4"   then PASS: E[0..4] .        "00000" . E[5]    . E[7]    
if E[6] == {5-9} then PASS: E[0..5] .        "0000"  . E[6]    . E[7]
2
  • Great answer. Is there any algorithm to convert EAN-8 to EAN-13? Oct 21, 2016 at 7:58
  • The above comment should have read: It is not possible to convert between EAN-8 and EAN-13 as they are entirely separate numbering systems. You can however convert between UPC-A and UPC-E as well as convert a UPC-A to EAN-13 Oct 26, 2016 at 12:17
3

Here is a C# version that is corrected. As well as some test cases.

public string Expand_UPCE_to_UPCA_GTIN12(string upce)
{
    return upce[6] switch
    {
        '0' or '1' or '2' => $"{upce[..3]}{upce[6]}0000{upce[3..6]}{upce[7]}",
        '3' => $"{upce[..4]}00000{upce[4..6]}{upce[7]}",
        '4' => $"{upce[..5]}00000{upce[5]}{upce[7]}",
        _ => $"{upce[..6]}0000{upce[6..]}",
    };
}

Console.WriteLine($"Test A: {Expand_UPCE_to_UPCA_GTIN12("02345673")} becomes 023456000073");
Console.WriteLine($"Test B: {Expand_UPCE_to_UPCA_GTIN12("02345147")} becomes 023450000017");
Console.WriteLine($"Test C: {Expand_UPCE_to_UPCA_GTIN12("08679339")} becomes 086700000939");
Console.WriteLine($"Test D: {Expand_UPCE_to_UPCA_GTIN12("06397126")} becomes 063200009716");
Console.WriteLine($"Test E: {Expand_UPCE_to_UPCA_GTIN12("07832309")} becomes 078000003239"); // Diet Dr Pepper 12 fl oz can 
2
  • Please add further details to expand on your answer, such as working code or documentation citations.
    – Community Bot
    Sep 7, 2021 at 4:56
  • Nice! This algorithm looks good!
    – RcoderNY
    Jun 8, 2022 at 19:50
3

This duplicates the algorithm in @Terry Burton's answer, written in Java.


switch (data.charAt(6)) {
    case '0':
    case '1':
    case '2': {
        data = data.substring(0, 3) + data.charAt(6) + "0000" + data.substring(3, 6) + data.charAt(7);
        break;
    }
    case '3': {
        data = data.substring(0, 4) + "00000" + data.substring(4, 6) + data.charAt(7);
        break;
    }
    case '4': {
        data = data.substring(0, 5) + "00000" + data.charAt(5) + data.charAt(7);
        break;
    }
    case '5':
    case '6':
    case '7':
    case '8':
    case '9': {
        data = data.substring(0, 6) + "0000" + data.charAt(6) + data.charAt(7);
        break;
    }
}
4
  • I think in case 0,1,2 the last digit should come before the "0000". bytescout.com/blog/2013/10/…
    – RcoderNY
    Jun 8, 2022 at 19:13
  • 1
    edit comment: I mean the last digit of the upc data.charAt(6) should come before the "0000" (not the actual last digit of the upc-e which is the check digit, that is already in the correct place data.charAt(7))
    – RcoderNY
    Jun 8, 2022 at 19:23
  • You are correct. I've reviewed a few different sources to confirm, and everywhere seems to agree that data.charAt(6) should proceed the string "0000". My answer has been updated, now I'll have to go update our production code...
    – psyklopz
    Jun 9, 2022 at 22:22
  • Ok cool, that is what I am using in production too. On a separate note, you may want to check case: 3 where data.substring(4, 5) probably should be data.substring(4, 6).
    – RcoderNY
    Jun 12, 2022 at 3:14
0

Answer in Swift 5. Beware that this returns 0 if a conversion is not possible, so you'll need to change the code if you don't want that result. Extensions are included to make String index ranges much easier to use:

static func convertUPCEtoUPCA(code: String) -> String {
    if code.isNumber && code.length == 8
    {
        switch code[6] {
        case "0", "1", "2":
            return "\(code.prefix(3))\(String(code[6]))0000\(code[3..<6])\(String(code[7]))"
        case "3":
            return "\(code.prefix(4))00000\(code[4..<6])\(String(code[7]))"
        case "4":
            return "\(code.prefix(5))00000\(String(code[5]))\(String(code[7]))"
        case "5", "6", "7", "8", "9":
            return "\(code.prefix(6))0000\(code.suffix(2))"
        default:
            return "0"
        }
    } else {
        return "0"
    }
}

extension String {
    subscript(_ range: CountableRange<Int>) -> String {
        let start = index(startIndex, offsetBy: max(0, range.lowerBound))
        let end = index(start, offsetBy: min(self.count - range.lowerBound,
                                             range.upperBound - range.lowerBound))
        return String(self[start..<end])
    }
    
    subscript(_ range: CountablePartialRangeFrom<Int>) -> String {
        let start = index(startIndex, offsetBy: max(0, range.lowerBound))
        return String(self[start...])
    }
}

extension StringProtocol {
    subscript(offset: Int) -> Character {
        self[index(startIndex, offsetBy: offset)]
    }
}

Answer also in Kotlin:

fun convertUPCEtoUPCA(barcode: String): String {
    var data = barcode

    if (isNumericToX(barcode) && barcode.length == 8) {
        when (data[6]) {
            '0', '1', '2' -> {
                data = data.substring(0, 3) + data[6].toString() + "0000" + data.substring(3, 6) + data[7]
            }
            '3' -> {
                data = data.substring(0, 4).toString() + "00000" + data.substring(4, 6) + data[7]
            }
            '4' -> {
                data = data.substring(0, 5).toString() + "00000" + data[5] + data[7]
            }
            '5', '6', '7', '8', '9' -> {
                data = data.substring(0, 6).toString() + "0000" + data[6] + data[7]
            }
        }
        return data
    } else if (isNumericToX(barcode)) {
        return barcode
    } else {
        return "0"
    }
}

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