Advanced Topics
This section covers additional topics regarding the Anyline Cordova Plugin. You will not require knowledge about these advanced topics in your everyday use of the SDK. However, in case you need specific information about certain topics in the Anyline SDK, it will be covered here.
UI Configuration
The Anyline Cordova plugin offers you a way to optionally introduce some basic UI controls to your scan view, which can improve scanning experience.
To add these controls to your scan view, you can define an options
node into the root of your JSON configuration containing instructions on how these controls appear. An example with the Done Button on iOS:
scanMode
segment control{
"licenseKey": "YOUR_LICENSE_KEY",
"options": {
"doneButtonConfig": {
"offset.y": -88
},
"segmentConfig": {
"titles": ["Universal", "DOT", "DOT-Strict"],
"modes": ["UNIVERSAL", "DOT", "DOT_STRICT"],
"offset.y": -24
}
},
"viewPluginConfig": {
"pluginConfig": {
"id": "TIRE",
"cancelOnResult": true,
"tinConfig": {
"scanMode": "UNIVERSAL"
}
}
}
}
iOS UI elements
The following controls are available on iOS: Done Button, Segment Control, and Label.
Done Button
The Done button is a button that dismisses the scan view screen when pressed. The button is present even when not explicitly included in the configuration. However, you can modify its appearance further by specifying a few properties (i.e. doneButtonConfig
) in your config:
Key | Value |
---|---|
|
The text displayed for the button |
|
A hex string denoting the color of the button title |
|
A hex string denoting the color used by the button title when pressed |
|
Size of the button title |
|
Name of the font (note: the font must be available for the device) |
|
Should be "LEFT", "RIGHT", or "CENTER" (the default), defining preset locations for the button along the x-axis. |
|
Should be "TOP", "CENTER", or "BOTTOM" (the default), defining preset locations for the button along the y-axis. |
|
A hex string indicating the color of the button background. The default is empty (clear color). |
|
Indicate whether the button should fill the width of the screen ("FULLWIDTH"), or simply fit the button text ("RECT", the default) |
|
Float indicating the corner rounding of the Done button. Default 0. |
|
Float value further adjusting the (x-)position of the button |
|
Float value further adjusting the (y-)position of the button |
Segment Control
If the plugin has support for different scan modes (currently, this is the case only for the following plugins: meter, license plate, OCR, container, and TIN), you can add a segment control that allows you to easily switch between said scan modes by adding a segmentConfig
node to options
.
If it appears, the segment control will by default be located at the bottom of the scan view, and centered horizontally within it.
The control is only added if the config meets the following requirements:
Please check Plugin Configuration Parameters for more information. |
Key | Value |
---|---|
|
an array of scan mode strings (that are valid for the plugin) in this configuration |
|
an array of user visible strings corresponding to the modes list. |
|
a color, denoted by a hex string, applied to the segment control (at least on iOS) |
|
Float value further adjusting the (x-)position of the segment control |
|
Float value further adjusting the (y-)position of the segment control |
Label
Finally, a static text label can be added to the scan view (useful when positioned next to the scan cutout, as a guide). Configure it with the labelConfig
node.
The label is only shown when configured. By default, if it is displayed, it appears directly above the cutout box in the scan view. |
Key | Value |
---|---|
|
the text to display |
|
a hex string denoting the color the label is to be displayed in |
|
the font size of the label |
|
Float value further adjusting the (x-)position of the label |
|
Float value further adjusting the (y-)position of the label |
Android UI elements
The following controls are available on Android: Default Orientation and Rotate Button.
Default Orientation
You can specify the default orientation that the scan screen should have when entering the screen. During the scan process you can only change the orientation, if you also added the Rotate Button to the JSON config.
Key | Value |
---|---|
|
The orientation of the screen, either |
Rotate Button
The rotate button allows you to switch the orientation of the scan screen from portrait to landscape and vice versa.
Key | Value |
---|---|
|
Positioning of the button on the scan screen (one of |
|
Integer value further adjusting the (x-)position of the rotate button |
|
Integer value further adjusting the (y-)position of the rotate button |
NFC Passport Reading Support for iOS
For now, our NFC scanning functionality is only currently available for iOS (Android support will be added in the future). In addition, a minimum version of iOS 13 is required. |
If you would like to use the MRZ+NFC use case, make sure to configure an MRZ plugin and set the enableNFCWithMRZ
option flag to true, as follows:
"options": {
"enableNFCWithMRZ": true
},
"viewPluginConfig": {
"pluginConfig": {
"id": "ID_NFC",
"mrzConfig": {
"strictMode": false
}
}
}
Besides the scan plugin config, you also have to add the following items to your app project’s info.plist
file (these are required in order to tell the OS that the app can be allowed to access NFC functionality):
Key | Value |
---|---|
Privacy - NFC Scan Usage Description |
A non-empty string describing how the app is using NFC, to be presented to the user as a prompt (e.g. "Please allow NFC access to read passports") |
ISO7816 application identifiers for NFC Tag Reader Session |
The list should include the string |
Finally, the "Near Field Communication Tag Reading" capability must also be added in the Xcode project’s Signing & Capabilities tab. The supported NFC reader formats should include TAG and NDEF.
To accomplish this in Cordova, make sure the following platform config nodes are included in your application’s config.xml, for example:
<platform name="ios">
<config-file parent="NFCReaderUsageDescription" target="*-Info.plist">
<string>Please allow NFC access to read passports</string>
</config-file>
<config-file parent="com.apple.developer.nfc.readersession.iso7816.select-identifiers" target="*-Info.plist">
<array>
<string>A0000002471001</string>
</array>
</config-file>
<config-file parent="com.apple.developer.nfc.readersession.formats" target="Entitlements-*.plist">
<array>
<string>NDEF</string>
<string>TAG</string>
</array>
</config-file>
...
</platform>
Native barcode support
Native barcode detection can be enabled to run alongside an Anyline plugin, using the underlying platform’s barcode detection library. When a supported barcode is found, it will be returned alongside the Anyline plugin results.
A use case might be a Meter plugin that is configured to also look for common barcode formats associated with meter devices.
To enable native barcode support, add a nativeBarcodeScanningFormats
property to your config’s option
node and list
down the barcode formats that you would like to scan. Possible barcode format strings can found from the list of constants here.
Take note that simply because a constant exists for a barcode format in that list doesn’t imply that the device necessarily supports it. Commonly-supported types include: CODE_128 , CODE_39 , QR_CODE , AZTEC , DATA_MATRIX , PDF_417 , UPC_E , CODABAR , EAN_13 , EAN_8 , and MICRO_QR .
|
{
"licenseKey": "...",
"options": {
"nativeBarcodeScanningFormats": [ "AZTEC", "PDF417", "QRCODE" ],
},
"viewPluginConfig": {
...
}
}
When the scan results are returned, the JSON string will include the node nativeBarcodesDetected
:
{
"meterResult": ...,
"nativeBarcodesDetected": {
[
{ "result": 480223447, "barcodeType": org.iso.Aztec }
]
}
}
At the moment, native barcode scanning has a number of limitations :
-
You can only add native barcode scanning as part of an Anyline plugin configuration. Any native barcodes detected will be shown only when the main Anyline plugin has returned a result.
-
There is no feedback to let the user know that a barcode has been detected in this way.
-
Only the last native barcode result detected will be reported in the result screen.
-
As previously mentioned, some barcode formats may not be supported by the mobile platform running it.
-
The results are provided on a "best-effort" basis. Anyline does not guarantee the correctness or accuracy of the results returned from native barcode detection.
If the limitations make it hard to implement your use case, consider using the Anyline Barcode plugin, and potentially in a parallel composite setup together with another plugin.
Reducing SDK size
With the Anyline SDK integrated into your app, it is still possible to cut down on the total installable app size by identifying your Anyline use case, and using this to further optimize the app bundle delivered to users. An Anyline SDK bundle comes trained models for all supported use cases, a number of which your application may not require, and hence could be excluded from your build process.
These are the modules you will need for each technical capability:
Technical capability | Module |
---|---|
VIN |
|
Container |
|
OCR |
|
Barcode |
|
Meter |
|
MRZ |
|
Universal ID |
|
Japanese Landing Permission |
|
License Plate |
|
TIN |
|
Commercial Tire ID |
|
Tire Size |
|
Now, after determining which scanning use cases your application needs, prepare a list of the corresponding modules as shown on the table above. Then, add the following preference entry to your app’s config.xml file:
<preference name="anyline-retain-assets-pattern" value="" />
To this preference’s value, give it a colon-separated list of module_*
identifiers
representing the Anyline modules which you would like to keep (the rest will be
removed when the Cordova application is built).
For example, if you want to only use barcode and ID-related plugins in Anyline, set the following preference:
<preference name="anyline-retain-assets-pattern" value="module_barcode:module_id" />
After making the changes, make sure to remove and then to re-add the plugin (i.e., using the Cordova CLI) in order for the changes to apply. Afterwards, building the application removes the unused assets resulting in a potentially-significant reduction in app size.
By default, when anyline-retain-assets-pattern
is unspecified, all modules are
available. When set, assets for the modules not explicitly listed would be removed, and
their corresponding plugins unusable in the application.
This preference is also implemented for the include demo app (see example/config.xml). |
Custom model files for OCR
Certain specialized use cases may call for "custom" model files to be used with the Anyline OCR plugin. These model files are specifically designed to allow for scanning of non-standard products: labels on bottlecaps, cattle tags, or voucher codes, to give a few examples.
To make use of these model files for your OCR scanning workflow, these would have to be added to the application binary to make them accessible to Anyline. To accomplish this in Cordova, copy the model files (which typically come with the .ale
file extension) to the www/assets/
directory.
Afterwards, your JSON configuration should reference said model files by their names.
JSON Configuration
Now, in order for the OCR plugin to use this file, explicitly reference the name of the file in the customCmdFile
property of the ocrConfig
:
"viewPluginConfig": {
"pluginConfig": {
"id": "cow-tag",
"ocrConfig": {
"customCmdFile": "cow_tag_scanner.ale"
}
}
}
If an .any
file is also included as part of the custom CMD package, add it to the application in the same manner, and also provide its name through the model
property within ocrConfig
.
Questions or need further assistance? Please reach out to the Anyline Support Helpdesk.