Thermal printing a two-color sales receipt

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6739773
  • Patent Number
    6,739,773
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, December 26, 2000
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 25, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
Methods of enhancing the appearance of, and safeguarding, sales receipts. The methods provide sales receipts with watermarks, strike-throughs, and circles-about-an-item. These added functions can be accomplished in real time. Some of them can be printed in distinguishing colors.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to printing sales receipts and, more particularly, to methods of enhancing the appearance of, and safeguarding, sales receipts by inclusion of watermarks, strike-throughs, and circles-about-an-item, all of which can be printed in two colors and in real time.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Printing sales receipts in two colors is well known in the art. The two colors, such as red and black, draw attention to and emphasize certain important items on the receipt, such as sales tax, discounts, and non-taxable items.




This invention reflects the discovery that the appearance of sales receipts can be improved by adding a strike-through function, a watermark, and a circle-about-an-item. In addition to enhancing the appearance of the receipt, these added functions also improve the security of the receipt against erasures, forgeries, and receipt duplications. For example, the strike-through function can be used to void certain items and to emphasize a discounted item. The watermark function is intended to embed a design, logo, or graphic into the receipt paper. The embedded design is useful in thwarting counterfeit receipts, distinguishing between original and duplicate receipts, and generally discouraging attempts to commit fraud. The circle-about-an-item function is extremely effective in emphasizing certain items.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




In accordance with the present invention, there is provided methods of enhancing the appearance of, and safeguarding, sales receipts. The methods of this invention provide sales receipts with watermarks, strike-throughs and circles-about-an-item. These added functions can be accomplished in real time; some of them can be printed in differentiating colors. The strike-through function is obtained by selectively adding a dot row to the center of the font cell. The strike-through has application in voiding purchased items, and in emphasizing the old price in a discounted item. The watermark function embeds a predefined logo or graphic into the receipt paper, in order to discourage fraud and counterfeiting. The watermark process prints the watermark in red, which cannot be copied on black print only copiers. The graphic is filtered to provide a faded background image. The method of adding a circle to surround a printed item can be selected to highlight specific text. The circle can be partially broken or completely closed. The method uses a set of four command parameters.




It is an object of this invention to provide methods of enhancing and safeguarding printed sales receipts.




It is another object of the invention to provide methods of adding strike-throughs, watermarks, and circles-about-an-item for two-color sales receipts.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




A complete understanding of the present invention may be obtained by reference to the accompanying drawings, when considered in conjunction with the subsequent detailed description, in which:





FIG. 1

illustrates a plan view of a typical font cell being modified to provide a strike-through function;





FIG. 2

depicts a plan view of a strike-through being used to emphasize the new sale price of a sales item;





FIG. 3

is a flow chart for the method of providing a strike-through for a sales receipt;





FIG. 4

illustrates a flow chart diagram for the process of generating a watermark on a sales receipt;





FIG. 5

depicts a plan view of printed sales receipt items featuring the circle-about-an-item function, in accordance with this invention; and





FIG. 6

is a flow chart of the method of providing the circle-about-an-item function as shown in FIG.


5


.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT




Generally speaking, the invention features three methods of enhancing the appearance of, and safeguarding, sales receipts. The methods of this invention provide sales receipts with watermarks, strike-throughs, and circles-about-an-item. These added functions can be accomplished in real time; some of them can be printed in distinguishing colors.




Now referring to

FIG. 1

, a typical font cell


10


for standard ASCII text is shown. The font cell


10


was obtained with a 203 dpi thermal printer. The font cell


10


is thirteen dots wide by twenty-four dots high.




In order to achieve a strike-through, a command is given by the user through the print keyboard (not shown), that selectively adds a dot row


12


to the center of the font cell


10


. The additional dot row


12


comprises the same color as does its destination character or characters. The strike-through function is illustrated in FIG.


2


. It is often used to void purchased items, sales prices, etc. and to highlight discount pricing.




Referring to

FIG. 3

, a flow chart


100


depicts the method used to obtain the strike-through, shown in FIG.


2


. From font memory


101


, font data is read, step


102


. The data is then stored in temporary memory


104


, step


103


. If the data has been properly extracted, step


105


, then color information is added, step


106


. If the data has not been properly extracted, step


105


, then block


102


is re-entered via feedback loop


107


.




Having properly appended the color information, step


106


, this is stored in temporary memory


104


. After the color information has been appended, the dots used for the strike-through function are inserted, step


109


. This information is also sent to temporary memory


104


. The temporary information is then copied into a text frame buffer


114


, step


112


. The program sequence then returns to the command parser.




The watermark function is a real-time operation that is intended to embed a logo or design into the sales receipt, in order to prevent fraud by fabricating a counterfeit or erroneous receipt. The watermark function combines arbitrary text (i.e., receipts with a predefined logo or graphic). The logo or graphic is filtered in order to achieve a faded effect. The faded logo is then merged, in real time, with the text stream. The result is a receipt with a faded image in the background. The graphic is printed in red only. The red watermark discourages counterfeiting, because the graphic is difficult to photocopy.




Referring to

FIG. 4

, a block diagram is shown of a flow chart


200


, showing the method of achieving a watermark when printing a sales receipt. After receipt of a print engine interrupt signal


201


, the system determines whether the watermark is enabled, step


202


. When the watermark is enabled, a raster is read from logo memory


204


, step


203


. A fade filter is then applied, step


205


, and the graphic is then merged with text, step


208


, which is secured from a frame buffer


207


. The text can be sent to the print head either directly, step


210


, or from the merged graphic, step


211


. The program sequence then returns to the command parser, step


212


.




The circle-about-an-item command is designed to allow the user to circle one to four lines of ASCII text at any location on the receipt. The circle is intended to provide an additional method for highlighting or emphasizing some section of the receipt. The command can be selected to create a closed or partially broken circle or any other regular or irregular surrounding shape, as shown in FIG.


5


. The command uses a set of four command parameters with two parameters used to initiate the sequence. The user, therefore, must transmit six, one byte data segments. A typical sequence is illustrated below, in hexadecimal form:






1B


h


XX


h


Field1


h


Field 2


h


Field 3


h


Field 4


h








As aforementioned, the command is composed of six segments, of which the first segment 1B


h


is an industry standard character (ESC). This character designates a command sequence. The second segment XX


h


refers to an undefined command code. This code is used to signify the real-time circle sequence. The last four parameters (Field1


h


through Field4


h


) are used as coordinate and image selection controls. Table 1, shown below, illustrates the use of these fields.















TABLE 1













Field 1




Lefthand Center/Loci. Number is based on the








maximum allowable characters per line.







Field 2




Righthand Center/Loci. Number is based on the








maximum allowable characters per line.







Field 3




Y axis dimension. This is limited to a range of








1 through 4. The field specifies the number of








lines that the circle will encompass.







Field 4




Equation/Image selection (i.e., Closed circle,








broken circle, other shape, etc.)















Referring to

FIG. 6

, a flow chart 300 is shown for providing a circle about a number of lines of text in a sales receipt. A print engine interrupt signal


301


is received. The system determines if the circle is enabled, step


302


. When the circle is enabled, a loci is placed in temporary memory


304


, step


303


. Next, a decision is made as to whether the circle is to be closed or broken, step


305


. If the broken circle is formed, step


306


, it is merged with text, step


308


, which is secured from the frame buffer


307


. If a closed circle is formed, step


309


, it is merged with text, step


308


, which is likewise secured from the frame buffer


307


. The text can be sent to the print head either directly, step


310


, or from the merged text and circle image, step


311


. The program sequence then returns to the command parser, step


312


.




Since other modifications and changes varied to fit particular operating requirements and environments will be apparent to those skilled in the art, the invention is not considered limited to the example chosen for purposes of disclosure, and covers all changes and modifications which do not constitute departures from the true spirit and scope of this invention.




Having thus described the invention, what is desired to be protected by Letters Patent is presented in the subsequently appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A method of printing at least a portion of a sales receipt with a graphic, the steps comprising:a) placing graphical information in memory; b) forming a graphic using said graphical information; c) merging said graphic with text in real time; and d) printing said merged graphic with text upon a sales receipt.
  • 2. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 1, wherein a circle-about an-item is printed about up to four lines of text.
  • 3. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 2, wherein said circle-about-an-item is printed with a broken circle.
  • 4. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 2, wherein said circle-about-an-item is printed with a closed circle.
  • 5. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 1, wherein a watermark is printed in red ink.
  • 6. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 1, wherein a watermark is printed, said method further comprising the step of:e) applying a fade filter to said graphic.
  • 7. A method of printing at least a portion of a sales receipt with a strike-through, the steps comprising:a) obtaining font information from memory; b) using a font cell from said font information, and selectively adding a dot row to an intermediate portion thereof; c) selecting a dot row axis; d) repeating steps (a) through (c) to generate a strike-through; and e) printing said strike-through upon a sales receipt.
  • 8. A method of enhancing at least a portion of a sales receipt with a graphic, the steps comprising:a) placing graphical information in memory; b) forming a graphic using said graphical information; c) merging said graphic with text in real time; and d) printing said merged graphic with text upon a sales receipt.
  • 9. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 8, wherein a circle-about-an-item is printed about up to four lines of text.
  • 10. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 9, wherein said circle-about-an-item is printed with a broken circle.
  • 11. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 9, wherein said circle-about-an-item is printed with a closed circle.
  • 12. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 8, wherein a watermark is printed in red ink.
  • 13. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 8, wherein a watermark is printed, said method further comprising the step of:e) applying a fade filter to said graphic.
  • 14. The method of printing a graphic upon a sales receipt in accordance with claim 8, wherein a watermark comprises a logo.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
5503483 Petteruti et al. Apr 1996 A
5850217 Cole Dec 1998 A
5947619 Kurashina et al. Sep 1999 A
6062750 Ueno et al. May 2000 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
09330473 Dec 1997 JP