Locale no_NO¶
faker.providers.address
¶
- class faker.providers.address.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- address() str ¶
- Example:
‘791 Crist Parks, Sashabury, IL 86039-9874’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.address() ... 'Hagenskogen 75, 8242 Livø' 'Bakkeneggen 78, 5659 Jennyodden' 'Moealléen 09A, 5351 Karinfjord' 'Auneengen 148, 1858 Lindasjøen' 'Næssløkka 5B, 3209 Larsen'
- building_number() str ¶
- Example:
‘791’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.building_number() ... '04F' '647' '9B' '2' '89'
- city() str ¶
- Example:
‘Sashabury’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.city() ... 'Thorsen' 'Amundsen' 'Madsen' 'Johansen' 'Lien'
- city_suffix() str ¶
- Example:
‘town’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.city_suffix() ... 'ås' 'helle' 'våg' 'mark' 'borg'
- country() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.country() ... 'Maldives' 'Palestine' 'Kingdom of the Netherlands' 'Barbados' 'Israel'
- country_code(representation: str = 'alpha-2') str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.country_code() ... 'MV' 'PS' 'NL' 'BB' 'IL'
- current_country() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.current_country() ... 'Norway' 'Norway' 'Norway' 'Norway' 'Norway'
- current_country_code() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.current_country_code() ... 'NO' 'NO' 'NO' 'NO' 'NO'
- postcode() str ¶
- Example:
86039-9874
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.postcode() ... '6048' '6475' '8242' '9489' '4115'
- street_address() str ¶
- Example:
‘791 Crist Parks’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.street_address() ... 'Amundsenholtet 647' 'Lundflata 5' 'Bakkeneggen 78' 'Knudsenkroken 9D' 'Martinsenholtet 2'
faker.providers.automotive
¶
- class faker.providers.automotive.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
Implement automotive provider for
hu_HU
locale.Sources:
faker.providers.bank
¶
- class faker.providers.bank.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
Implement bank provider for
no_NO
locale.- aba() str ¶
Generate an ABA routing transit number.
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.aba() ... '076048766' '057593829' '052194896' '034115783' '025659384'
- bank_country() str ¶
Generate the bank provider’s ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code.
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.bank_country() ... 'NO' 'NO' 'NO' 'NO' 'NO'
- bban() str ¶
Generate a Basic Bank Account Number (BBAN).
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.bban() ... '66048764759' '38242194892' '41157815659' '38778408016' '09753513933'
- iban() str ¶
Generate an International Bank Account Number (IBAN).
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.iban() ... 'NO6966048764759' 'NO4638242194892' 'NO0841157815659' 'NO9838778408016' 'NO2909753513933'
- swift(length: int | None = None, primary: bool = False, use_dataset: bool = False) str ¶
Generate a SWIFT code.
SWIFT codes, reading from left to right, are composed of a 4 alphabet character bank code, a 2 alphabet character country code, a 2 alphanumeric location code, and an optional 3 alphanumeric branch code. This means SWIFT codes can only have 8 or 11 characters, so the value of
length
can only beNone
or the integers8
or11
. If the value isNone
, then a value of8
or11
will randomly be assigned.Because all 8-digit SWIFT codes already refer to the primary branch or office, the
primary
argument only has an effect if the value oflength
is11
. Ifprimary
isTrue
andlength
is11
, the 11-digit SWIFT codes generated will always end in'XXX'
to denote that they belong to primary branches/offices.For extra authenticity, localized providers may opt to include SWIFT bank codes, location codes, and branch codes used in their respective locales. If
use_dataset
isTrue
, this method will generate SWIFT codes based on those locale-specific codes if included. If those codes were not included, then it will behave as ifuse_dataset
wereFalse
, and in that mode, all those codes will just be randomly generated as per the specification.- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift() ... 'YNBINO65ZT4' 'SGQENOSIGQ8' 'JDXCNOV4' 'LNKTNON9' 'OQIBNO9AFZA'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift(length=8) ... 'MYNBNOQ6' 'PMZJNO4W' 'SGQENOSI' 'YDTZNOQ8' 'WZTENOTG'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift(length=8, use_dataset=True) ... 'MYNBNOQ6' 'PMZJNO4W' 'SGQENOSI' 'YDTZNOQ8' 'WZTENOTG'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift(length=11) ... 'MYNBNOQ65ZT' 'PLSGNO6ISIG' 'TZIRNOJTGEV' 'PRDLNO1UN94' 'OQIBNO9AFZA'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift(length=11, primary=True) ... 'MYNBNOQ6XXX' 'PMZJNO4WXXX' 'SGQENOSIXXX' 'YDTZNOQ8XXX' 'WZTENOTGXXX'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift(length=11, use_dataset=True) ... 'MYNBNOQ65ZT' 'PLSGNO6ISIG' 'TZIRNOJTGEV' 'PRDLNO1UN94' 'OQIBNO9AFZA'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift(length=11, primary=True, use_dataset=True) ... 'MYNBNOQ6XXX' 'PMZJNO4WXXX' 'SGQENOSIXXX' 'YDTZNOQ8XXX' 'WZTENOTGXXX'
- swift11(primary: bool = False, use_dataset: bool = False) str ¶
Generate an 11-digit SWIFT code.
This method uses
swift()
under the hood with thelength
argument set to11
. Ifprimary
is set toTrue
, the SWIFT code will always end with'XXX'
. All 11-digit SWIFT codes use this convention to refer to the primary branch/office.- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift11() ... 'MYNBNOQ65ZT' 'PLSGNO6ISIG' 'TZIRNOJTGEV' 'PRDLNO1UN94' 'OQIBNO9AFZA'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift11(use_dataset=True) ... 'MYNBNOQ65ZT' 'PLSGNO6ISIG' 'TZIRNOJTGEV' 'PRDLNO1UN94' 'OQIBNO9AFZA'
- swift8(use_dataset: bool = False) str ¶
Generate an 8-digit SWIFT code.
This method uses
swift()
under the hood with thelength
argument set to8
and with theprimary
argument omitted. All 8-digit SWIFT codes already refer to the primary branch/office.- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift8() ... 'MYNBNOQ6' 'PMZJNO4W' 'SGQENOSI' 'YDTZNOQ8' 'WZTENOTG'
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.swift8(use_dataset=True) ... 'MYNBNOQ6' 'PMZJNO4W' 'SGQENOSI' 'YDTZNOQ8' 'WZTENOTG'
faker.providers.company
¶
- class faker.providers.company.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- bs() str ¶
- Example:
‘integrate extensible convergence’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.bs() ... 'iterate integrated e-markets' 'integrate back-end mindshare' 'synthesize wireless content' 'syndicate synergistic applications' 'productize killer mindshare'
- catch_phrase() str ¶
- Example:
‘Robust full-range hub’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.catch_phrase() ... 'Networked well-modulated instruction set' 'Balanced empowering migration' 'Pre-emptive impactful toolset' 'Innovative mission-critical help-desk' 'Reduced didactic middleware'
faker.providers.date_time
¶
- class faker.providers.date_time.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- am_pm() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.am_pm() ... 'AM' 'PM' 'PM' 'PM' 'PM'
- century() str ¶
- Example:
‘XVII’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.century() ... 'XIII' 'XIV' 'II' 'IX' 'XVII'
- date(pattern: str = '%Y-%m-%d', end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) str ¶
Get a date string between January 1, 1970 and now.
- Parameters:
pattern – Format of the date (year-month-day by default)
- Example:
‘2008-11-27’
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date() ... '2016-03-29' '2011-07-04' '1993-01-11' '1984-03-06' '1997-12-30'
- date_between(start_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '-30y', end_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = 'today') date ¶
Get a Date object based on a random date between two given dates. Accepts date strings that can be recognized by strtotime().
- Parameters:
start_date – Defaults to 30 years ago
end_date – Defaults to “today”
- Example:
Date(‘1999-02-02’)
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_between() ... datetime.date(2020, 2, 3) datetime.date(2017, 6, 30) datetime.date(2007, 5, 17) datetime.date(2002, 7, 11) datetime.date(2010, 2, 4)
- date_between_dates(date_start: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None, date_end: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) date ¶
Takes two Date objects and returns a random date between the two given dates. Accepts Date or datetime objects
- Parameters:
date_start – Date
date_end – Date
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_between_dates() ... datetime.date(2024, 10, 4) datetime.date(2024, 10, 4) datetime.date(2024, 10, 4) datetime.date(2024, 10, 4) datetime.date(2024, 10, 4)
- date_object(end_datetime: datetime | None = None) date ¶
Get a date object between January 1, 1970 and now
- Example:
datetime.date(2016, 9, 20)
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_object() ... datetime.date(2016, 3, 29) datetime.date(2011, 7, 4) datetime.date(1993, 1, 11) datetime.date(1984, 3, 6) datetime.date(1997, 12, 30)
- date_of_birth(tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None, minimum_age: int = 0, maximum_age: int = 115) date ¶
Generate a random date of birth represented as a Date object, constrained by optional miminimum_age and maximum_age parameters.
- Parameters:
tzinfo – Defaults to None.
minimum_age – Defaults to 0.
maximum_age – Defaults to 115.
- Example:
Date(‘1979-02-02’)
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_of_birth() ... datetime.date(2006, 9, 17) datetime.date(1996, 9, 5) datetime.date(1957, 7, 18) datetime.date(1938, 10, 17) datetime.date(1968, 1, 25)
- date_this_century(before_today: bool = True, after_today: bool = False) date ¶
Gets a Date object for the current century.
- Parameters:
before_today – include days in current century before today
after_today – include days in current century after today
- Example:
Date(‘2012-04-04’)
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_this_century() ... datetime.date(2020, 11, 27) datetime.date(2018, 10, 7) datetime.date(2010, 5, 31) datetime.date(2006, 5, 30) datetime.date(2012, 8, 28)
- date_this_decade(before_today: bool = True, after_today: bool = False) date ¶
Gets a Date object for the decade year.
- Parameters:
before_today – include days in current decade before today
after_today – include days in current decade after today
- Example:
Date(‘2012-04-04’)
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_this_decade() ... datetime.date(2024, 1, 7) datetime.date(2023, 8, 10) datetime.date(2021, 12, 31) datetime.date(2021, 3, 25) datetime.date(2022, 6, 7)
- date_this_month(before_today: bool = True, after_today: bool = False) date ¶
Gets a Date object for the current month.
- Parameters:
before_today – include days in current month before today
after_today – include days in current month after today
- Example:
dtdate(‘2012-04-04’)
- Returns:
dtdate
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_this_month() ... datetime.date(2024, 10, 3) datetime.date(2024, 10, 3) datetime.date(2024, 10, 2) datetime.date(2024, 10, 1) datetime.date(2024, 10, 2)
- date_this_year(before_today: bool = True, after_today: bool = False) date ¶
Gets a Date object for the current year.
- Parameters:
before_today – include days in current year before today
after_today – include days in current year after today
- Example:
Date(‘2012-04-04’)
- Returns:
Date
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_this_year() ... datetime.date(2024, 8, 21) datetime.date(2024, 7, 28) datetime.date(2024, 4, 26) datetime.date(2024, 3, 12) datetime.date(2024, 5, 21)
- date_time(tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None, end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) datetime ¶
Get a datetime object for a date between January 1, 1970 and now
- Parameters:
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘2005-08-16 20:39:21’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time() ... datetime.datetime(2016, 3, 29, 2, 50, 8, 38538) datetime.datetime(2011, 7, 4, 16, 47, 10, 881138) datetime.datetime(1993, 1, 11, 18, 30, 1, 729740) datetime.datetime(1984, 3, 6, 13, 3, 8, 673485) datetime.datetime(1997, 12, 30, 21, 45, 49, 771562)
- date_time_ad(tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None, end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None, start_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) datetime ¶
Get a datetime object for a date between January 1, 001 and now
- Parameters:
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘1265-03-22 21:15:52’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_ad() ... datetime.datetime(1709, 11, 28, 5, 25, 3, 508392) datetime.datetime(1534, 12, 2, 16, 53, 24, 764503) datetime.datetime(852, 2, 19, 20, 52, 53, 773735) datetime.datetime(524, 12, 26, 15, 9, 49, 643341) datetime.datetime(1035, 9, 13, 6, 11, 30, 763767)
- date_time_between(start_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '-30y', end_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = 'now', tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Get a datetime object based on a random date between two given dates. Accepts date strings that can be recognized by strtotime().
- Parameters:
start_date – Defaults to 30 years ago
end_date – Defaults to “now”
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘1999-02-02 11:42:52’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_between() ... datetime.datetime(2020, 2, 4, 2, 32, 14, 236214) datetime.datetime(2017, 7, 1, 15, 57, 0, 808743) datetime.datetime(2007, 5, 18, 21, 26, 41, 361449) datetime.datetime(2002, 7, 12, 14, 37, 17, 49189) datetime.datetime(2010, 2, 5, 17, 54, 13, 171082)
- date_time_between_dates(datetime_start: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None, datetime_end: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None, tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Takes two datetime objects and returns a random datetime between the two given datetimes. Accepts datetime objects.
- Parameters:
datetime_start – datetime
datetime_end – datetime
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘1999-02-02 11:42:52’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_between_dates() ... datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 4, 19, 21, 31) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 4, 19, 21, 31) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 4, 19, 21, 31) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 4, 19, 21, 31) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 4, 19, 21, 31)
- date_time_this_century(before_now: bool = True, after_now: bool = False, tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Gets a datetime object for the current century.
- Parameters:
before_now – include days in current century before today
after_now – include days in current century after today
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘2012-04-04 11:02:02’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_this_century() ... datetime.datetime(2020, 11, 27, 18, 54, 36, 411918) datetime.datetime(2018, 10, 7, 19, 1, 58, 524478) datetime.datetime(2010, 5, 31, 13, 37, 58, 845207) datetime.datetime(2006, 5, 30, 14, 13, 56, 705741) datetime.datetime(2012, 8, 28, 20, 52, 22, 427665)
- date_time_this_decade(before_now: bool = True, after_now: bool = False, tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Gets a datetime object for the decade year.
- Parameters:
before_now – include days in current decade before today
after_now – include days in current decade after today
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘2012-04-04 11:02:02’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_this_decade() ... datetime.datetime(2024, 1, 8, 6, 52, 15, 978181) datetime.datetime(2023, 8, 10, 22, 28, 1, 199901) datetime.datetime(2022, 1, 1, 7, 1, 24, 460658) datetime.datetime(2021, 3, 26, 4, 56, 51, 924837) datetime.datetime(2022, 6, 8, 0, 11, 19, 486426)
- date_time_this_month(before_now: bool = True, after_now: bool = False, tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Gets a datetime object for the current month.
- Parameters:
before_now – include days in current month before today
after_now – include days in current month after today
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘2012-04-04 11:02:02’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_this_month() ... datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 4, 5, 8, 42, 747170) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 3, 21, 14, 44, 381537) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 2, 14, 25, 22, 207791) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 1, 23, 39, 15, 388921) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 2, 22, 42, 33, 654386)
- date_time_this_year(before_now: bool = True, after_now: bool = False, tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Gets a datetime object for the current year.
- Parameters:
before_now – include days in current year before today
after_now – include days in current year after today
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘2012-04-04 11:02:02’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.date_time_this_year() ... datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 22, 14, 3, 47, 891433) datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 29, 13, 33, 13, 734985) datetime.datetime(2024, 4, 26, 20, 6, 5, 583748) datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 12, 22, 17, 26, 968656) datetime.datetime(2024, 5, 22, 0, 51, 6, 898178)
- day_of_month() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.day_of_month() ... '29' '04' '11' '06' '30'
- day_of_week() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.day_of_week() ... 'tirsdag' 'mandag' 'mandag' 'tirsdag' 'tirsdag'
- future_date(end_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '+30d', tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) date ¶
Get a Date object based on a random date between 1 day from now and a given date. Accepts date strings that can be recognized by strtotime().
- Parameters:
end_date – Defaults to “+30d”
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
dtdate(‘2030-01-01’)
- Returns:
dtdate
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.future_date() ... datetime.date(2024, 10, 29) datetime.date(2024, 10, 26) datetime.date(2024, 10, 17) datetime.date(2024, 10, 12) datetime.date(2024, 10, 19)
- future_datetime(end_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '+30d', tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Get a datetime object based on a random date between 1 second form now and a given date. Accepts date strings that can be recognized by strtotime().
- Parameters:
end_date – Defaults to “+30d”
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘1999-02-02 11:42:52’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.future_datetime() ... datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 30, 3, 20, 32, 594731) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 27, 13, 5, 9, 54467) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 17, 10, 10, 13, 116942) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 12, 13, 46, 43, 957843) datetime.datetime(2024, 10, 20, 3, 28, 35, 566513)
- iso8601(tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None, end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None, sep: str = 'T', timespec: str = 'auto') str ¶
Get a timestamp in ISO 8601 format (or one of its profiles).
- Parameters:
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
sep – separator between date and time, defaults to ‘T’
timespec – format specifier for the time part, defaults to ‘auto’ - see datetime.isoformat() documentation
- Example:
‘2003-10-21T16:05:52+0000’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.iso8601() ... '2016-03-29T02:50:08.038538' '2011-07-04T16:47:10.881138' '1993-01-11T18:30:01.729740' '1984-03-06T13:03:08.673485' '1997-12-30T21:45:49.771562'
- month() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.month() ... '03' '07' '01' '03' '12'
- month_name() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.month_name() ... 'mars' 'juli' 'januar' 'mars' 'desember'
- past_date(start_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '-30d', tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) date ¶
Get a Date object based on a random date between a given date and 1 day ago. Accepts date strings that can be recognized by strtotime().
- Parameters:
start_date – Defaults to “-30d”
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
dtdate(‘1999-02-02’)
- Returns:
dtdate
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.past_date() ... datetime.date(2024, 9, 28) datetime.date(2024, 9, 25) datetime.date(2024, 9, 16) datetime.date(2024, 9, 11) datetime.date(2024, 9, 18)
- past_datetime(start_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '-30d', tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) datetime ¶
Get a datetime object based on a random date between a given date and 1 second ago. Accepts date strings that can be recognized by strtotime().
- Parameters:
start_date – Defaults to “-30d”
tzinfo – timezone, instance of datetime.tzinfo subclass
- Example:
datetime(‘1999-02-02 11:42:52’)
- Returns:
datetime
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.past_datetime() ... datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 30, 3, 20, 31, 594731) datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 27, 13, 5, 8, 54467) datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 17, 10, 10, 12, 116942) datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 12, 13, 46, 42, 957843) datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 20, 3, 28, 34, 566513)
- pytimezone(*args: Any, **kwargs: Any) tzinfo | None ¶
Generate a random timezone (see faker.timezone for any args) and return as a python object usable as a tzinfo to datetime or other fakers.
- Example:
faker.pytimezone()
- Returns:
dateutil.tz.tz.tzfile
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.pytimezone() ... tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/Indian/Maldives') tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/America/Barbados') tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Stockholm') tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/Africa/Windhoek') tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/Asia/Qatar')
- time(pattern: str = '%H:%M:%S', end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) str ¶
Get a time string (24h format by default)
- Parameters:
pattern – format
- Example:
‘15:02:34’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.time() ... '02:50:08' '16:47:10' '18:30:01' '13:03:08' '21:45:49'
- time_delta(end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) timedelta ¶
Get a timedelta object
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.time_delta() ... datetime.timedelta(0) datetime.timedelta(0) datetime.timedelta(0) datetime.timedelta(0) datetime.timedelta(0)
- time_object(end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) time ¶
Get a time object
- Example:
datetime.time(15, 56, 56, 772876)
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.time_object() ... datetime.time(2, 50, 8, 38538) datetime.time(16, 47, 10, 881138) datetime.time(18, 30, 1, 729740) datetime.time(13, 3, 8, 673485) datetime.time(21, 45, 49, 771562)
- time_series(start_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = '-30d', end_date: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int = 'now', precision: float | None = None, distrib: Callable[[datetime], float] | None = None, tzinfo: tzinfo | None = None) Iterator[Tuple[datetime, Any]] ¶
Returns a generator yielding tuples of
(<datetime>, <value>)
.The data points will start at
start_date
, and be at every time interval specified byprecision
.distrib
is a callable that accepts<datetime>
and returns<value>
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.time_series() ... <generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7fb0c2de5a10> <generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7fb0c2de5a10> <generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7fb0c2de5a10> <generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7fb0c2de5a10> <generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7fb0c2de5a10>
- timezone() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.timezone() ... 'Indian/Maldives' 'America/Barbados' 'Europe/Stockholm' 'Africa/Windhoek' 'Asia/Qatar'
- unix_time(end_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None, start_datetime: date | datetime | timedelta | str | int | None = None) float ¶
Get a timestamp between January 1, 1970 and now, unless passed explicit start_datetime or end_datetime values.
On Windows, the decimal part is always 0.
- Example:
1061306726.6
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.unix_time() ... 1459219808.0385377 1309798030.881138 726777001.7297399 447426188.67348534 883518349.7715625
faker.providers.internet
¶
- class faker.providers.internet.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- ascii_company_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ascii_company_email() ... 'athorsen@hagen.no' 'toedegaard@iversen-nielsen.no' 'royboee@paulsen.org' 'sondrebakken@antonsen-sivertsen.no' 'gmyhre@knudsen.no'
- ascii_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ascii_email() ... 'qamundsen@hotmail.com' 'toedegaard@yahoo.com' 'hannaboee@yahoo.com' 'paulsenole@soerensen.org' 'sivertsensvein@myhre-bakken.no'
- ascii_free_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ascii_free_email() ... 'athorsen@gmail.com' 'hanne76@yahoo.com' 'liversen@gmail.com' 'royboee@gmail.com' 'ingeborg92@yahoo.com'
- ascii_safe_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ascii_safe_email() ... 'athorsen@example.org' 'hanne76@example.com' 'liversen@example.org' 'royboee@example.org' 'ingeborg92@example.com'
- company_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.company_email() ... 'athorsen@hagen.no' 'toedegaard@iversen-nielsen.no' 'royboee@paulsen.org' 'sondrebakken@antonsen-sivertsen.no' 'gmyhre@knudsen.no'
- dga(year: int | None = None, month: int | None = None, day: int | None = None, tld: str | None = None, length: int | None = None) str ¶
Generates a domain name by given date https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_generation_algorithm
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.dga() ... 'hxqvaffcmfsccynscisxeajjagjahtnfcmfsccynscisxeajjagjahtnfcmfscc.org' 'meydkrgdcvulautulqvjofrrnbjkfmvrewtpfttqcjafdhxckmyfamohcpnldug.org' 'iiulfpgbvqcdaehnqkbxmaqgkykorlxnwy.net' 'cpyhexmtvewxpwiiaxtgdfajuhbsyaaykvgkgreki.com' 'uqniukqjckmjabijnuqholpsjayatffafysbsyaaytuquhbpmpviajxnaro.no'
- domain_name(levels: int = 1) str ¶
Produce an Internet domain name with the specified number of subdomain levels.
>>> domain_name() nichols-phillips.com >>> domain_name(2) williamson-hopkins.jackson.com
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.domain_name() ... 'thorsen-joergensen.org' 'lie.org' 'iversen-nielsen.no' 'hanssen.com' 'gundersen.no'
- domain_word() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.domain_word() ... 'thorsen-joergensen' 'madsen' 'oedegaard-hauge' 'nielsen' 'boee'
- email(safe: bool = True, domain: str | None = None) str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.email() ... 'athorsen@example.org' 'hanne76@example.com' 'liversen@example.org' 'royboee@example.org' 'ingeborg92@example.com'
- free_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.free_email() ... 'athorsen@gmail.com' 'hanne76@yahoo.com' 'liversen@gmail.com' 'royboee@gmail.com' 'ingeborg92@yahoo.com'
- free_email_domain() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.free_email_domain() ... 'yahoo.com' 'yahoo.com' 'gmail.com' 'yahoo.com' 'hotmail.com'
- hostname(levels: int = 1) str ¶
Produce a hostname with specified number of subdomain levels.
>>> hostname() db-01.nichols-phillips.com >>> hostname(0) laptop-56 >>> hostname(2) web-12.williamson-hopkins.jackson.com
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.hostname() ... 'web-66.hagen.no' 'laptop-47.nielsen.no' 'srv-42.paulsen.org' 'lt-92.bakken.com' 'web-57.bakken.no'
- http_method() str ¶
Returns random HTTP method https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Methods
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.http_method() ... 'OPTIONS' 'OPTIONS' 'GET' 'DELETE' 'PATCH'
- http_status_code(include_unassigned: bool = True) int ¶
Returns random HTTP status code https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9110#name-status-codes :param include_unassigned: Whether to include status codes which have
not yet been assigned or are unused
- Returns:
a random three digit status code
- Return type:
- Example:
404
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.http_status_code() ... 532 297 488 555 315
- iana_id() str ¶
Returns IANA Registrar ID https://www.iana.org/assignments/registrar-ids/registrar-ids.xhtml
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.iana_id() ... '6463344' '7056021' '679216' '4343903' '8577767'
- image_url(width: int | None = None, height: int | None = None, placeholder_url: str | None = None) str ¶
Returns URL to placeholder image Example: http://placehold.it/640x480
- Parameters:
width – Optional image width
height – Optional image height
placeholder_url – Optional template string of image URLs from custom placeholder service. String must contain
{width}
and{height}
placeholders, eg:https:/example.com/{width}/{height}
.
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.image_url() ... 'https://picsum.photos/788/861' 'https://dummyimage.com/530x995' 'https://dummyimage.com/621x976' 'https://dummyimage.com/447x285' 'https://placekitten.com/286/194'
- ipv4(network: bool = False, address_class: str | None = None, private: str | None = None) str ¶
Returns a random IPv4 address or network with a valid CIDR.
- Parameters:
network – Network address
address_class – IPv4 address class (a, b, or c)
private – Public or private
- Returns:
IPv4
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ipv4() ... '171.174.170.81' '95.25.112.121' '51.105.121.194' '195.110.164.126' '141.250.247.54'
- ipv4_network_class() str ¶
Returns a IPv4 network class ‘a’, ‘b’ or ‘c’.
- Returns:
IPv4 network class
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ipv4_network_class() ... 'b' 'b' 'a' 'b' 'c'
- ipv4_private(network: bool = False, address_class: str | None = None) str ¶
Returns a private IPv4.
- Parameters:
network – Network address
address_class – IPv4 address class (a, b, or c)
- Returns:
Private IPv4
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ipv4_private() ... '172.29.117.82' '10.248.203.131' '172.25.180.188' '172.22.253.123' '192.168.71.140'
- ipv4_public(network: bool = False, address_class: str | None = None) str ¶
Returns a public IPv4 excluding private blocks.
- Parameters:
network – Network address
address_class – IPv4 address class (a, b, or c)
- Returns:
Public IPv4
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ipv4_public() ... '166.186.169.69' '111.198.92.30' '168.155.75.206' '141.250.247.54' '212.120.204.37'
- ipv6(network: bool = False) str ¶
Produce a random IPv6 address or network with a valid CIDR
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ipv6() ... 'e3e7:682:c209:4cac:629f:6fbf:d82c:7cd' 'f728:b4fa:4248:5e3a:a5d:2f35:6baa:9455' 'eb11:67b3:67a9:c378:7c65:c1e6:82e2:e662' 'f7c1:bd87:4da5:e709:d471:3d61:c8a7:639' 'e443:df78:9558:867f:5ba9:1fb0:7a02:4204'
- mac_address(multicast: bool = False) str ¶
Returns a random MAC address.
- Parameters:
multicast – Multicast address
- Returns:
MAC Address
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.mac_address() ... '66:c5:d7:14:84:f8' '48:9b:f4:b7:6f:47' '18:47:30:80:4b:9e' '6e:25:a9:f1:33:b5' '0e:a1:68:f4:e2:85'
- nic_handle(suffix: str = 'FAKE') str ¶
Returns NIC Handle ID https://www.apnic.net/manage-ip/using-whois/guide/person/
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.nic_handle() ... 'ZYT1598-FAKE' 'SIW493-FAKE' 'UE59352-FAKE' 'WBUN892-FAKE' 'CHQD98-FAKE'
- nic_handles(count: int = 1, suffix: str = '????') List[str] ¶
Returns NIC Handle ID list
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.nic_handles() ... ['ZYT1598-EWLN'] ['WGNZ53-QITZ'] ['UERV52-EJGW'] ['CHQ498-DZJA'] ['UU1864-TEMK']
- port_number(is_system: bool = False, is_user: bool = False, is_dynamic: bool = False) int ¶
Returns a network port number https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6335
- Parameters:
is_system – System or well-known ports
is_user – User or registered ports
is_dynamic – Dynamic / private / ephemeral ports
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.port_number() ... 50494 55125 5306 33936 63691
- ripe_id() str ¶
Returns RIPE Organization ID https://www.ripe.net/manage-ips-and-asns/db/support/organisation-object-in-the-ripe-database
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ripe_id() ... 'ORG-ZYT1598-RIPE' 'ORG-SIW493-RIPE' 'ORG-UE59352-RIPE' 'ORG-WBUN892-RIPE' 'ORG-CHQD98-RIPE'
- safe_domain_name() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.safe_domain_name() ... 'example.com' 'example.com' 'example.org' 'example.com' 'example.net'
- safe_email() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.safe_email() ... 'athorsen@example.org' 'hanne76@example.com' 'liversen@example.org' 'royboee@example.org' 'ingeborg92@example.com'
- slug(value: str | None = None) str ¶
Django algorithm
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.slug() ... 'three-image-son' 'kitchen-amount' 'much-mention' 'why-step-themselves' 'me-help-past-wait'
- tld() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.tld() ... 'no' 'no' 'com' 'org' 'no'
- uri(schemes: List[str] | None = None, deep: int | None = None) str ¶
- Parameters:
schemes – a list of strings to use as schemes, one will chosen randomly. If None, it will generate http and https uris. Passing an empty list will result in schemeless uri generation like “://domain.com/index.html”.
deep – an integer specifying how many path components the URI should have..
- Returns:
a random url string.
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.uri() ... 'https://oedegaard-hauge.no/categorylogin.jsp' 'http://www.soerensen.org/main/mainprivacy.htm' 'http://www.lien.org/search/categories/categoryhomepage.htm' 'http://www.oedegaard-sandvik.com/exploreauthor.php' 'https://myklebust.net/explorehomepage.html'
- uri_extension() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.uri_extension() ... '.php' '.php' '.html' '.htm' '.asp'
- uri_page() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.uri_page() ... 'author' 'category' 'privacy' 'category' 'index'
- uri_path(deep: int | None = None) str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.uri_path() ... 'posts/tag' 'explore/tag' 'explore/category' 'blog' 'category'
- url(schemes: List[str] | None = None) str ¶
- Parameters:
schemes – a list of strings to use as schemes, one will chosen randomly. If None, it will generate http and https urls. Passing an empty list will result in schemeless url generation like “://domain.com”.
- Returns:
a random url string.
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.url() ... 'https://hagen.no/' 'https://iversen-nielsen.no/' 'http://thomassen.no/' 'https://www.bakken.com/' 'https://bakken.no/'
faker.providers.person
¶
- class faker.providers.person.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- first_name() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.first_name() ... 'Øystein' 'Trine' 'Aud' 'Dag' 'Petter'
- first_name_female() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.first_name_female() ... 'Kjersti' 'Vilde' 'Lene' 'Ann' 'Helene'
- first_name_male() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.first_name_male() ... 'Kristian' 'Vidar' 'Magne' 'Arild' 'Jan'
- first_name_nonbinary() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.first_name_nonbinary() ... 'Øystein' 'Trine' 'Aud' 'Dag' 'Petter'
- language_name() str ¶
Generate a random i18n language name (e.g. English).
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.language_name() ... 'Luba-Katanga' 'Malay' 'Aymara' 'Interlingue' 'Quechua'
- last_name() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.last_name() ... 'Jenssen' 'Thorsen' 'Jørgensen' 'Amundsen' 'Hagen'
- last_name_female() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.last_name_female() ... 'Jenssen' 'Thorsen' 'Jørgensen' 'Amundsen' 'Hagen'
- last_name_male() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.last_name_male() ... 'Jenssen' 'Thorsen' 'Jørgensen' 'Amundsen' 'Hagen'
- last_name_nonbinary() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.last_name_nonbinary() ... 'Jenssen' 'Thorsen' 'Jørgensen' 'Amundsen' 'Hagen'
- name() str ¶
- Example:
‘John Doe’
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.name() ... 'Trine Jørgensen' 'Petter Madsen' 'Anna Ødegård' 'Emma Iversen' 'Gro-Mari Bøe'
- name_female() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.name_female() ... 'Trine Jørgensen' 'Petter Madsen' 'Anna Ødegård' 'Emma Iversen' 'Gro-Mari Bøe'
- name_male() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.name_male() ... 'Trine Jørgensen' 'Petter Madsen' 'Anna Ødegård' 'Emma Iversen' 'Gro-Mari Bøe'
- name_nonbinary() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.name_nonbinary() ... 'Trine Jørgensen' 'Petter Madsen' 'Anna Ødegård' 'Emma Iversen' 'Gro-Mari Bøe'
- prefix() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.prefix() ... 'Prof.' 'Prof.' 'Dr.' 'Prof.' 'Prof.'
- prefix_female() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.prefix_female() ... 'Prof.' 'Prof.' 'Dr.' 'Prof.' 'Prof.'
- prefix_male() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.prefix_male() ... 'Prof.' 'Prof.' 'Dr.' 'Prof.' 'Prof.'
- prefix_nonbinary() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.prefix_nonbinary() ... 'Prof.' 'Prof.' 'Dr.' 'Prof.' 'Prof.'
- suffix() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.suffix() ... '' '' '' '' ''
- suffix_female() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.suffix_female() ... '' '' '' '' ''
faker.providers.phone_number
¶
- class faker.providers.phone_number.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- country_calling_code() str ¶
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.country_calling_code() ... '+687' '+595' '+880' '+964' '+41'
- msisdn() str ¶
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSISDN
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.msisdn() ... '6048764759382' '2194892411578' '5659387784080' '6097535139332' '1158714841858'
faker.providers.ssn
¶
- class faker.providers.ssn.no_NO.Provider(generator: Any)¶
Bases:
Provider
- ssn(dob: str | None = None, gender: Literal['M', 'F'] | None = None) str ¶
Returns 11 character Norwegian personal identity code (Fødselsnummer).
A Norwegian personal identity code consists of 11 digits, without any whitespace or other delimiters. The form is DDMMYYIIICC, where III is a serial number separating persons born oh the same date with different intervals depending on the year they are born. CC is two checksums. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_identification_number#Norway
- Parameters:
- Returns:
Fødselsnummer in str format (11 digs)
- Return type:
- Examples:
>>> Faker.seed(0) >>> for _ in range(5): ... fake.ssn() ... '18037202599' '26116025581' '06016437377' '30066118211' '19123839474'