How do I tell if keyboard input is coming from a barcode scanner?

半城伤御伤魂 提交于 2019-11-29 09:20:21
Cody Gray

You'll get input from both. Not simultaneously, of course. It will all be placed into a queue, but Windows will process key events from both keyboards.

Don't be helpless, though. As David Heffernan suggests, you can easily figure this out yourself by plugging in both keyboards to your computer, opening up Notepad, and typing random characters to see which one generates input.

You reply that you want to "check that with C# code", but I have no idea what that means. How about creating a console app that reads input from the keyboard and displays it on the screen?

using System;

class AdvancedKeyboardTester
{
   static void Main(string[] args)
   {
      for (; ;)
      {
         Console.ReadKey();
      }
   }
}

Press Ctrl+C when you tire of the fun and want to quit the program.


Edit: It sounds like you're looking for the RegisterRawInputDevices function, which allows you to enable raw input for all of your keyboards, and then enumerate through the results to determine which device sent the message.

Fortunately, it looks like someone has already written a C# wrapper library for this, available for download on Code Project: Using Raw Input from C# to handle multiple keyboards


Edit 2: (it seems the information just keeps tricking in from the comments)

If you're using a barcode scanner, this gets a lot easier. Because they're explicitly designed for this purpose, they're almost all programmable. Meaning that you can tell them to prefix (and/or suffix) their input with some sentinel characters that indicate the input is coming from the barcode scanner, rather than a standard keyboard. (Check your barcode scanner's user manual for more information.) Then, all you have to do is filter out the keyboard input based on the presence or absence of those sentinel characters. You can also check for how quickly the characters between the prefix and suffix were entered.

Take a look at Microsoft's MultiPoint SDK

(edit: this answer is no longer applicable now that the question has been clarified. i'm leaving it here for others to discover though)

This is OS dependent, however you will find that in most modern operating systems you will get simultaneous input from both. The best method would be to actually try it on your platform.

Avoid having both people type at the same time ;)

Have an event listener check the time delay between keystrokes. A barcode scanner will send keystrokes very fast, while a human's input using keyboard will be comparatively slow. I know this will work because I have done such thing using Javascript on a web application.

I don't know C# programming, so I have just given you the logic. Happy day!

Almost all barcode readers can be configured with a prefix and suffix to whatever it reads. Try and configure yours with, for instance, a prefix of "*" and a suffix of , and then in your C# code, force the focus to an invisible textbox whenever * comes from the input stream, and in the lostfocus event of this textbox put all code to process the entry. Be aware though that the character you chose to be the prefix is never entered in the keyboard. Also, set the tabstop property of the textbox to false, just to keep the user from reaching the object when navigating the screen. Good luck !

Here is something modeled off of @asif's answer. It is for use in a WPF app, is in C# and has been tested. I went with Stopwatch as it is more accurate than datetime, you'll find it in the System.Diagnostics namespace.

I wanted mine to capture text when the app (not a specific textbox) was in focus, so that is a bit different too. You'll see that in order to handle that properly, since I don't know what the actual character gets inserted, only the Key enumeration. Since primarily cared about numbers 1-10 and those enums are D1, D2, etc, I strip off the D part when needed.

Stopwatch _inputStopwatch = new Stopwatch();
string _input = "";

private void Window_KeyUp(object sender, KeyEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.Key == Key.Enter)
    {
        _inputStopwatch.Reset();
        HandleBarcode(_input);
        _input = "";
    }
    else
    {
        if (!_inputStopwatch.IsRunning)
            _inputStopwatch.Start();
        else if (_inputStopwatch.ElapsedMilliseconds > 50)
        {
            _inputStopwatch.Restart();
            _input = "";
        }

        Console.WriteLine("DEBUG: " + e.Key + " - " + _inputStopwatch.ElapsedMilliseconds + "ms");

        var keyString = e.Key.ToString();
        if (keyString.Length == 2 && keyString.StartsWith("D"))
            keyString = keyString[1].ToString();

        //if (_inputStopwatch.ElapsedMilliseconds < 50)
            _input += keyString;
        //else
        //    _input = "";

        _inputStopwatch.Restart();
    }
}

private void HandleBarcode(string barcodeInput)
{
    //do stuff with the barcode input
}
asif

Try:

Dim PreviousKeyPressTime As DateTime = Nothing

Private Sub TextBox1_KeyDown(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.KeyEventArgs) Handles TextBox1.KeyDown

    If e.KeyCode = Keys.Enter Then
        PreviousKeyPressTime = Nothing
        TextBox1.Text = String.Empty
    Else
        If PreviousKeyPressTime = Nothing Then
            PreviousKeyPressTime = DateTime.Now
        End If
        Dim startTime As DateTime = Now
        Dim runLength As Global.System.TimeSpan = startTime.Subtract(CType(Me.PreviousKeyPressTime, DateTime))
        Dim millisecs As Integer = runLength.Milliseconds
        Dim secs As Integer = runLength.Seconds
        Dim TotalMiliSecs As Integer = ((secs * 1000) + millisecs)

        lblDiff.Text = TotalMiliSecs

        If TotalMiliSecs <= 50 Then
            lblMsg.Text = String.Empty
        Else
            lblMsg.Text = "keyboard Input not Allow"
        End If
        PreviousKeyPressTime = DateTime.Now
    End If
End Sub

Source : http://itlearnerinsect.blogspot.com/

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