Enter the code into our search field, and we will provide you with the corresponding product name, brand, and image. Our comprehensive database has UPC, EAN, ISBN, and GTIN codes for over 500 million products, growing daily, making it easy to get the information you need.
UPC stands for Universal Product Code, a 12-digit barcode used to identify products in North America. A UPC can be used to identify products in stores and online. Our UPC Lookup Tool lets you quickly find product information such as name, brand, and image by entering the UPC code.
GTIN stands for Global Trade Item Number, a 14-digit identifier used to identify products in the global supply chain. GTIN includes all types of barcodes, such as EAN, UPC, and ISBN. Our Barcode Lookup Tool can help you find product information quickly and easily by entering the GTIN code.
Yes, you can scan barcodes with your smartphone using the Barcode Lookup Tool. Simply hit "Scan barcode" to activate your device's camera and extract the product code from the UPC or EAN. While it works on computers, scanning barcodes with a smartphone is generally faster and easier. The barcode scanner is powered by the Scanbot Web Barcode Scanner SDK.
Our Barcode Lookup Tool is very accurate and relies on an extensive and constantly updated database of product information. However, there may be rare cases where the barcode number is not found in the database or the data retrieved is incorrect or outdated.
The GS1 Database is a single source of truth for ensuring your end-customers get accurate data. You can search by Global Trade Item Number (GTIN), the number encoded in a UPC barcode. You can also search for Global Location Number (GLN), company name, or other GS1 keys. By licensing a GS1 Company Prefix with GS1 US, companies are identified as the licensee of this number and all associated GS1 identification numbers built with that number, as long as it is active. The results from queries in the GS1 Database include basic GS1 licenses and licensee information, product data, and location data for more than one million GS1 member companies in more than 110 countries. This tool is ideal if you want to:
How can you be sure that the product and location data your company is working with is accurate and ready to circulate throughout the supply chain? By utilizing the GS1 Database, you can conduct UPC lookup / GTIN lookup / GLN lookup / GS1 Company Prefix lookup to remediate inaccuracies and discrepancies in foundational supply chain data, allowing for growth and confidence.
The GS1 Database offers a quick and easy way to verify product, location, and company data but it comes with limitations. GS1 US offers a more rounded experience with GS1 US Data Hub. With a Data Hub View/Use subscription, your additional benefits compared to the GS1 Database are:
GS1 US and design is a registered trademark of GS1 US, Inc. Trademarks appearing on this site are owned by GS1 US, Inc. unless otherwise noted, and may not be used without the permission of GS1 US, Inc.
I have a database that stores compuerts, printers, etc... Each device has two different barcodes on them, our companies, and the serialnumber that it came from. I have been successful in using our Ipads to scan the barcodes and put them into the system as numbers and letters, no problem. Now I would like to have a search button that scans a barcode and then takes that barcode number and searches for it in the database. I am confused on how to do this.
That is a good video and instructions he gives on that site, but I do not need to create bar codes from google. I simply need to scan the barcodes on the devices, store it and then do a search with the barcode I scanned. I can't seem to figure that out.
It's hard to tell where exactly you are having a difficulty with this. Scanning a barcode is practically the same thing as typing it. You must start by going to a layout where your global field is and placing the cursor inside it. Then you scan the barcode (or type it). Then you enter Find mode and set the Barcode field to the contents of the global. Then you perform find.
Go-UPC are experts in product data. Our barcode search engine gives you immediate access to data for products, books, and retail items from all over the world, and with our API or bulk-lookup service, you can leverage this massive database to power your own business or application.
Our UPC-lookup service reaches companies and stores large and small. Whether you're dealing with items from a global grocery chain like Walmart, or your local "IGA" supermarket, we've got you covered.
Problem Symptoms:
Search for a physical item (e.g. by barcode) and select "More Info": Alma shows that a number requests exist.
Clicking the hyperlinked number of requests loads up the Resource Request Monitoring screen.
However, no requests display for this item. The list is empty.
Cause:
The number of requests showing for the Physical Item search is the number of requests that can be fulfilled by that item. In this workflow, the Resource Request Monitoring screen displays requests that are specifically for this item. If the request will be fulfilled by other items, no requests will display.
Resolution:
Prefer a Title search over search on physical items,
This way, the "More Info" button will display the multiple requests that may have been placed for this title. The Resource Request Monitoring screen will now show the correct number of requests.
In the Smartsheet app, I opened the sheet in mobile view and I search the Product number through the barcode scanning option. So sometimes it scans the barcode properly and shows me the correct result and sometimes it shows "no match found".
How soon after the form submission are you using the Search toolbar? Currently, the Search functionality may be delayed up to 10 minutes from when the information is added or updated to when the Search results will display that updated information.
So if you submit the form then immediately use the Search function to find that barcode, it's likely that the Search will return "no match found". If you wait a few more minutes then it should work as expected.
I opened a support ticket, but I can't close this pop-up no matter what I click or what browser I use and I'm wondering if anyone has any insight. I'm LOCKED OUT of my work because of some stupid UI refresh alert. ?
I'm building the world's simplest library application. All I want to be able to do is scan in a book's UPC (barcode) using a typical scanner (which just types the numbers of the barcode into a field) and then use it to look up data about the book... at a minimum, title, author, year published, and either the Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress catalog number.
The goal is to print out a tiny sticker ("spine label") with the card catalog number that I can stick on the spine of the book, and then I can sort the books by card catalog number on the shelves in our company library. That way books on similar subjects will tend to be near each other, for example, if you know you're looking for a book about accounting, all you have to do is find SOME book about accounting and you'll see the other half dozen that we have right next to it which makes it convenient to browse the library.
There seem to be lots of web APIs to do this, including Amazon and the Library of Congress. But those are all extremely confusing to me. What I really just want is a single higher level function that takes a UPC barcode number and returns some basic data about the book.
If you buy from Borders your book's barcodes will all be stickered over with their own internal barcodes (called a "BINC"). Most annoyingly whatever glue they use gets harder and harder to remove cleanly over time. I know of no API that converts them. LibraryThing does it by screenscraping.
On worldcat.com, you can create a URL using the ISBN that will take you straight to a book detail page. That page isn't as very useful because it's still HTML scraping to get the data, but they have a link to download the book data in a couple "standard" formats.
For example, their demo book: a "EndNote" format download link =endnote&client=worldcat.org-detailed_record, and you can harvest the data from that file very easily. That's linked from their own OCLC number, not the ISBN, but the scrape to convert that isn't hard, and they may yet have a good interface to do it.
Using the web site Library Thing, you can scan in your barcodes (the entire barcode, not just the ISBN - if you have a scanning "wedge" you're in luck) and build your library. (It is an excellent social network - think StackOverflow for book enthusiasts.)
I'm afraid the problem is database access. Companies pay to have a UPC assigned and so the database isn't freely accessible. The UPCdatabase site mentioned by Philip is a start, as is UPCData.info, but they're user entered--which means incomplete and possibly inaccurate.
If you want to guarantee the accuracy of the data, you can go with the a paid solution. GS1 is the organization that issues UPC codes, so their information should always be accurate ( -company-database-gepir).
You can search up to 250 barcodes at a time. The barcodes searched cannot exceed 6500 characters. A counter displays how many barcodes and characters remain after you have entered multiple barcodes. Once you meet the limit, the Term(s) text field prevents you from entering any additional barcodes.
You can search for orders in the Shopify POS app by using the global search bar, by tapping Orders in the navigation bar, or by scanning a receipt barcode. All your POS and online orders display on the Orders screen.
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