In this quick blogpost I’ll show you how to read data from a QR code and convert it into variables to use in the app, leveraging the recently acquired by SAP, the low-code no code solution: AppyGyver.
SAP AppGyver reads the QR Code as a text. For this exercise, we need to make sure that this text is written as a JSON Object, because we’ll use it to convert it from text to a JSON Object to extract the variables that are inside.
Prerequisites:
- If you don’t a SAP AppGyver account, get a trial account here.
- Download the SAP AppGyver mobile app in your App Store.
- Search for a QR Code generator. In my case I used this generator.
What we’ll do first, is to create the QR Code. Go to your QR Code generator of preference or use the generator that I used and past this JSON Object:
{
"brand": "Samsung",
"model": "French Door 29 ft",
"imgURL": "https://samsungmx.vtexassets.com/arquivos/ids/180853-800-auto?width=800&height=auto&aspect=true"
}
I’m simulating we’re reading relevant data from a specific refrigerator.
You should be seeing the already generated QR Code like this:
Now, go to your SAP AppGyver trial account and create a new application.
I named mine “QR Demo App”. You’ll immediately see a single page app with a headline and a sample text description. I changed the Headline to “QR Demo App” and the text description as you see in the image.
What you need to do now is to drag and drop a Button component into the app, to make it consistent I changed the label to “Read QR”.
Before going to the Button’s logic flow, let’s create first a page variable which will contain the variables from the JSON Object. Click on “View – Variables“.
Add a Page Variable and name it “parsedJson“, and select “Object” as the variable value type. Then add 3 new properties and change the names to brand, model and imgURL -following the format as illustrated above- selecting as well these variable value types as you see them in the screen shot:
Click again in “View – Variables” to return to the app page editor.
Now we need to add the logic flow for this Button. Select the Button and click on “Show logic for Button 1“.
The first thing you need to do is to drag and drop the logic component “Scan QR barcode“, and add a name to the QR/Barcode to be recognized. I named mine “qr“.
Then add a JavaScript component to the logic flow. Here is where we are going to write a few lines of code to parse our JSON and extract data outputs from the QR code. This video helped me to understand how to put the custom code.
Double click on the JavaScript component to open the editor. Make sure “qr” is set as the input and reading the output of the QR code scanned, like this:
Copy and paste this code into the editor:
try {
const json = JSON.parse(inputs.qr)
return { json }
} catch (err) {
const error = {
code: 'jsonError',
message: 'Could not parse json',
rawError: err
}
return [1, { error }]
}
It should look like the image below. Now you have to set 2 different outputs. I named it “json“, this would be the object that will convert the values into the variables we want to extract.
Same case for the “error” output, set it as an Object and enter its properties (code and message as text and rawError as any value).
Now add a Toast dialog component to show up if an error occurs. Make sure you link the second output to this component. On the right side where the properties are located, click on Toast message and select “PARSE JSON / error“.
Now add the output we want :). Look for “Set page variable” and in the Variable name, select the Page Variable we created earlier and assigned the value to the “json” Object output of the JavaScript code.
Now, minimize the Logic flow and let’s drag and drop an image, title and text components. If you want, put them inside of a container.
Now select the content in each of these components (and source for the image), the Page variable we created earlier now with the output of the parsed JSON object. This is the example for “brand”:
Repeat the same steps for “imgURL” and “model” and Save the app.
Now let’s test it. Click on “Launch” and “reveal QR code“. Read this QR Code using your mobile SAP AppGyver app (this is to link your account to your mobile app).
Open the “QR Demo App” in your AppGyver mobile App, and then click on the “Read QR” Button, this will open your device camera so you scan the QR code previously generated. You should see the result like this:
Hope you’ve enjoyed this quick exercise leveraging low-code no-code capabilities with SAP AppGyver. Of course you can take this data to keep using them in the app 🙂
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