Locale es_CL

faker.providers.address

class faker.providers.address.es_CL.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()
...
'Ruta 5 Sur, km 42'
'Balmaceda 338 Piso 2\nProvidencia, Región Metropolitana, 4892410'
'Las Azucenas 4659 Of. 9771\nTortel, Región de Aysén del General Carlos Ibáñez del Campo'
'Ruta T-16, km 32, Región de Aysén del General Carlos Ibáñez del Campo'
'Calle Pedro de Valdivia 2287 Dpto. 2958\nHualqui, Región del Biobío, 1858390'
administrative_unit() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.administrative_unit()
...
'Región Metropolitana'
'Región de Los Ríos'
'Región de Antofagasta'
'Región de La Araucanía'
'Región de Ñuble'
building_number() str
Example:

‘791’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.building_number()
...
'16'
'5876'
'6'
'338'
'9194'
city() str
Example:

‘Sashabury’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.city()
...
'Treguaco'
'Teodoro Schmidt'
'Copiapó'
'Rauco'
'Quinchao'
city_suffix() str
Example:

‘town’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.city_suffix()
...
'Ville'
'Ville'
'Ville'
'Ville'
'Ville'
common_street_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.common_street_name()
...
'Los Alerces'
'Lautaro'
'Gabriela Mistral'
'Manuel Rodríguez'
'Los Aromos'
commune() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.commune()
...
'Treguaco'
'Teodoro Schmidt'
'Copiapó'
'Rauco'
'Quinchao'
commune_and_region() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.commune_and_region()
...
'Treguaco, Región de Ñuble'
'Teodoro Schmidt, Región de La Araucanía'
'Copiapó, Región de Atacama'
'Rauco, Región del Maule'
'Quinchao, Región de Los Lagos'
commune_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.commune_code()
...
'16207'
'09117'
'03101'
'07305'
'10210'
country() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.country()
...
'Líbano'
'Maldivas'
'Australia'
'Georgia'
'Palau'
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()
...
'Chile'
'Chile'
'Chile'
'Chile'
'Chile'
current_country_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.current_country_code()
...
'CL'
'CL'
'CL'
'CL'
'CL'
highway_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.highway_name()
...
'Ruta 5 Sur'
'Ruta 5 Sur'
'Ruta 5 Norte'
'Ruta 5 Sur'
'Ruta 5 Sur'
historic_people_street_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.historic_people_street_name()
...
'Los Carrera'
'Casanova'
'Alberto Hurtado'
'Matta'
'Baquedano'
plant_street_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.plant_street_name()
...
'Las Mosquetas'
'Los Calafates'
'Las Araucarias'
'Los Digitales'
'Los Laureles'
postcode() str
Example:

86039-9874

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.postcode()
...
'6604870'
'6475930'
'8242190'
'4892410'
'1578150'
province() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.province()
...
'Itata'
'Curicó'
'Talagante'
'Concepción'
'Antofagasta'
province_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.province_code()
...
'162'
'073'
'136'
'081'
'021'
region() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.region()
...
'Región Metropolitana'
'Región de Los Ríos'
'Región de Antofagasta'
'Región de La Araucanía'
'Región de Ñuble'
region_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.region_code()
...
'RM'
'LR'
'AN'
'AR'
'NB'
road_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.road_name()
...
'Ruta U-560'
'Ruta 576-CH'
'Ruta U-459'
'Ruta 324-CH'
'Ruta T-59'
secondary_address() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.secondary_address()
...
'Piso 6'
'Piso 78'
'Piso 47'
'Of. 324'
'Of. 3482'
street_address() str
Example:

‘791 Crist Parks’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.street_address()
...
'Casanova 8 Piso 64'
'Luis Morales 3489'
'Avda. Santa Rosa 715 Piso 9'
'Las Mosquetas 108 Dpto. 660'
'Calle Pedro de Valdivia 2287 Dpto. 2958'
street_name() str
Example:

‘Crist Parks’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.street_name()
...
'Manuel Bulnes'
'Psje. Los Tilos'
'Balmaceda'
'Las Rosas'
'Calle Juana Mardones'
street_prefix() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.street_prefix()
...
'Av.'
'Avda.'
'Calle'
'Calle'
'Calle'
street_suffix() str
Example:

‘Avenue’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.street_suffix()
...
'Sur'
'Sur'
'Norte'
'Sur'
'Sur'

faker.providers.automotive

class faker.providers.automotive.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

Implement automotive provider for es locale.

Sources:

license_plate() str

Generate a license plate.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.license_plate()
...
'TB-4876'
'Z-7593'
'PGFL-89'
'Z-1157'
'SVRJ-87'
license_plate_diplomatic() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.license_plate_diplomatic()
...
'CD-6048'
'CD-6475'
'CC-8242'
'CC-9489'
'CC-4115'
license_plate_new() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.license_plate_new()
...
'TVCL-87'
'TPXS-93'
'YGPG-19'
'LZGP-11'
'RXZF-56'
license_plate_old() str

Generate an old format license plate.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.license_plate_old()
...
'SS-0487'
'SK-7593'
'XF-4219'
'KX-9241'
'CL-7815'
license_plate_police() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.license_plate_police()
...
'Z-6048'
'Z-6475'
'RP-8242'
'RP-9489'
'RP-4115'
license_plate_temporary() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.license_plate_temporary()
...
'PR-660'
'PR-487'
'PR-647'
'PR-593'
'PR-824'
vin() str

Generate vin number.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.vin()
...
'RT3GZYSKXXNDZ9J97'
'G0K75MX77NULDXVG4'
'16S1YMFL25CEF0V66'
'LZY7KJ8M0DJV6RLFJ'
'BCB3GX5649036SHFD'

faker.providers.color

class faker.providers.color.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

color(hue: str | float | int | Sequence[int] | None = None, luminosity: str | None = None, color_format: str = 'hex') str

Generate a color in a human-friendly way.

Under the hood, this method first creates a color represented in the HSV color model and then converts it to the desired color_format. The argument hue controls the H value according to the following rules:

  • If the value is a number from 0 to 360, it will serve as the H value of the generated color.

  • If the value is a tuple/list of 2 numbers from 0 to 360, the color’s H value will be randomly selected from that range.

  • If the value is a valid string, the color’s H value will be randomly selected from the H range corresponding to the supplied string. Valid values are 'monochrome', 'red', 'orange', 'yellow', 'green', 'blue', 'purple', and 'pink'.

The argument luminosity influences both S and V values and is partially affected by hue as well. The finer details of this relationship are somewhat involved, so please refer to the source code instead if you wish to dig deeper. To keep the interface simple, this argument either can be omitted or can accept the following string values:'bright', 'dark', 'light', or 'random'.

The argument color_format controls in which color model the color is represented. Valid values are 'hsv', 'hsl', 'rgb', or 'hex' (default).

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color(hue='red')
...
'#af2f33'
'#e02141'
'#ef6466'
'#a80a14'
'#ed9e95'
>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color(luminosity='light')
...
'#79c3e0'
'#89ffa1'
'#96cbf7'
'#aafaff'
'#e3f495'
>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color(hue=(100, 200), color_format='rgb')
...
'rgb(26, 155, 88)'
'rgb(9, 193, 49)'
'rgb(73, 229, 154)'
'rgb(107, 249, 166)'
'rgb(76, 204, 69)'
>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color(hue='orange', luminosity='bright')
...
'#efc332'
'#edae65'
'#d1861d'
'#ffcc42'
'#e09533'
>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color(hue=135, luminosity='dark', color_format='hsv')
...
'hsv(135, 96, 45)'
'hsv(135, 98, 57)'
'hsv(135, 94, 61)'
'hsv(135, 99, 47)'
'hsv(135, 94, 50)'
>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color(hue=(300, 20), luminosity='random', color_format='hsl')
...
'hsl(217, 94, 27)'
'hsl(40, 23, 54)'
'hsl(268, 100, 74)'
'hsl(175, 43, 31)'
'hsl(131, 47, 11)'
color_hsl(hue: str | float | int | Sequence[int] | None = None, luminosity: str | None = None) Tuple[int, int, int]

Generate a HSL color tuple in a human-friendly way.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color_hsl()
...
(197, 57, 32)
(132, 90, 39)
(207, 76, 65)
(183, 88, 33)
(258, 62, 73)
color_hsv(hue: str | float | int | Sequence[int] | None = None, luminosity: str | None = None) Tuple[int, int, int]

Generate a HSV color tuple in a human-friendly way.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color_hsv()
...
(197, 73, 51)
(132, 95, 76)
(207, 58, 92)
(183, 94, 64)
(258, 37, 90)
color_name() str

Generate a color name.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color_name()
...
'Rojo'
'Rosa brumoso'
'Amarillo verde'
'Gris gainsboro (Estaño)'
'Verde prado'
color_rgb(hue: str | float | int | Sequence[int] | None = None, luminosity: str | None = None) Tuple[int, int, int]

Generate a RGB color tuple of integers in a human-friendly way.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color_rgb()
...
(35, 103, 130)
(9, 193, 46)
(98, 173, 234)
(9, 155, 163)
(170, 144, 229)
color_rgb_float(hue: str | float | int | Sequence[int] | None = None, luminosity: str | None = None) Tuple[float, float, float]

Generate a RGB color tuple of floats in a human-friendly way.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.color_rgb_float()
...
(0.13770000000000002, 0.4045149999999999, 0.51)
(0.038000000000000034, 0.76, 0.18239999999999984)
(0.3864000000000001, 0.6798800000000002, 0.92)
(0.03840000000000004, 0.6099200000000001, 0.64)
(0.6668999999999999, 0.5670000000000001, 0.9)
hex_color() str

Generate a color formatted as a hex triplet.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.hex_color()
...
'#d82c08'
'#629f70'
'#c2094d'
'#e3e707'
'#6baa95'
rgb_color() str

Generate a color formatted as a comma-separated RGB value.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.rgb_color()
...
'197,215,20'
'132,248,207'
'155,244,183'
'111,71,144'
'71,48,128'
rgb_css_color() str

Generate a color formatted as a CSS rgb() function.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.rgb_css_color()
...
'rgb(197,215,20)'
'rgb(132,248,207)'
'rgb(155,244,183)'
'rgb(111,71,144)'
'rgb(71,48,128)'
safe_color_name() str

Generate a web-safe color name.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.safe_color_name()
...
'azul'
'blanco'
'azul'
'negro'
'violeta'
safe_hex_color() str

Generate a web-safe color formatted as a hex triplet.

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.safe_hex_color()
...
'#ccdd11'
'#88ffcc'
'#99ffbb'
'#664499'
'#443388'

faker.providers.company

class faker.providers.company.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

bs() str
Example:

‘integrate extensible convergence’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.bs()
...
'incuba esquemas proactivas'
'fortalece servicios web front-end'
'compromete interfaces eficientes'
'entrega tecnologías distribuidas'
'orquesta arquitecturas intuitivas'
catch_phrase() str
Example:

‘Robust full-range hub’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.catch_phrase()
...
'instalación multitarea enfocado al negocio'
'flexibilidad regional recontextualizado'
'interfaz híbrida realineado'
'conjunto terciaria basado en funcionalidad'
'sistema abierto sensible al contexto mandatorio'
company() str
Example:

‘Acme Ltd’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.company()
...
'Valentina Karen Orellana Barra E.I.R.L.'
'Ferreira, Figueroa y Bahamondes Limitada'
'Grupo Morales, Soto y Véliz SPA'
'Grupo Soto, Díaz y Monsalve S.A.'
'Elizabeth Lucía Fuentes Paredes EIRL'
company_prefix() str
Example:

‘Grupo’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.company_prefix()
...
'Club'
'Club'
'Corporación'
'Grupo'
'Laboratorio'
company_suffix() str
Example:

‘Ltd’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.company_suffix()
...
'S.p.A.'
'S.p.A.'
'Sociedad Anónima'
'S.A.'
'SPA'

faker.providers.currency

class faker.providers.currency.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

cryptocurrency() Tuple[str, str]
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.cryptocurrency()
...
('XRP', 'Ripple')
('STC', 'SwiftCoin')
('BC', 'BlackCoin')
('NXT', 'Nxt')
('IOTA', 'IOTA')
cryptocurrency_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.cryptocurrency_code()
...
'XRP'
'STC'
'BC'
'NXT'
'IOTA'
cryptocurrency_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.cryptocurrency_name()
...
'Ripple'
'SwiftCoin'
'BlackCoin'
'Nxt'
'IOTA'
currency() Tuple[str, str]
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.currency()
...
('MWK', 'Kwacha malauí')
('NZD', 'Dólar neozelandés')
('BAM', 'Marco bosnioherzegovino')
('IRR', 'Rial iraní')
('SPL', 'Luigino')
currency_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.currency_code()
...
'MWK'
'NZD'
'BAM'
'IRR'
'SPL'
currency_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.currency_name()
...
'Kwacha malauí'
'Dólar neozelandés'
'Marco bosnioherzegovino'
'Rial iraní'
'Luigino'
currency_symbol(code: str | None = None) str
Example:

$

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.currency_symbol()
...
'$'
'$'
'KM'
'kr'
'L'
pricetag() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.pricetag()
...
'$\xa0860.480'
'$\xa0447.590'
'$\xa0524.210'
'$\xa0292.410'
'$\xa07.578.150'

faker.providers.date_time

class faker.providers.date_time.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

am_pm() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.am_pm()
...
'AM'
'AM'
'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()
...
'2015-10-12'
'2011-02-03'
'1992-10-19'
'1984-01-14'
'1997-09-19'
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(2019, 7, 18)
datetime.date(2016, 12, 12)
datetime.date(2006, 10, 29)
datetime.date(2001, 12, 23)
datetime.date(2009, 7, 19)
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, 3, 18)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 18)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 18)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 18)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 18)
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(2015, 10, 12)
datetime.date(2011, 2, 3)
datetime.date(1992, 10, 19)
datetime.date(1984, 1, 14)
datetime.date(1997, 9, 19)
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, 3, 1)
datetime.date(1996, 2, 18)
datetime.date(1956, 12, 30)
datetime.date(1938, 3, 31)
datetime.date(1967, 7, 9)
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, 6, 11)
datetime.date(2018, 5, 8)
datetime.date(2010, 3, 8)
datetime.date(2006, 4, 8)
datetime.date(2012, 5, 18)
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(2023, 7, 22)
datetime.date(2023, 3, 11)
datetime.date(2021, 10, 8)
datetime.date(2021, 2, 2)
datetime.date(2022, 2, 25)
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, 3, 15)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 13)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 8)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 5)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 9)
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, 3, 6)
datetime.date(2024, 2, 28)
datetime.date(2024, 2, 2)
datetime.date(2024, 1, 20)
datetime.date(2024, 2, 9)
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(2015, 10, 12, 6, 37, 39, 857333)
datetime.datetime(2011, 2, 3, 3, 31, 5, 288621)
datetime.datetime(1992, 10, 19, 16, 15, 48, 411357)
datetime.datetime(1984, 1, 14, 18, 33, 49, 891452)
datetime.datetime(1997, 9, 19, 16, 15, 39, 473505)
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, 6, 12, 9, 12, 35, 327187)
datetime.datetime(1534, 7, 4, 3, 37, 19, 171989)
datetime.datetime(851, 11, 27, 18, 38, 40, 455353)
datetime.datetime(524, 11, 4, 20, 40, 30, 861305)
datetime.datetime(1035, 6, 3, 0, 41, 20, 465710)
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(2019, 7, 19, 3, 44, 30, 236214)
datetime.datetime(2016, 12, 13, 17, 9, 16, 808743)
datetime.datetime(2006, 10, 30, 22, 38, 57, 361449)
datetime.datetime(2001, 12, 24, 15, 49, 33, 49189)
datetime.datetime(2009, 7, 20, 19, 6, 29, 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, 3, 18, 20, 33, 47)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 18, 20, 33, 47)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 18, 20, 33, 47)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 18, 20, 33, 47)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 18, 20, 33, 47)
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, 6, 11, 22, 42, 8, 230713)
datetime.datetime(2018, 5, 9, 5, 45, 52, 931961)
datetime.datetime(2010, 3, 8, 11, 23, 45, 526825)
datetime.datetime(2006, 4, 8, 19, 44, 37, 923708)
datetime.datetime(2012, 5, 18, 15, 22, 12, 129608)
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(2023, 7, 23, 10, 39, 47, 796976)
datetime.datetime(2023, 3, 12, 9, 11, 55, 607383)
datetime.datetime(2021, 10, 9, 4, 47, 11, 142276)
datetime.datetime(2021, 2, 2, 10, 27, 33, 142804)
datetime.datetime(2022, 2, 25, 18, 41, 9, 188368)
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, 3, 16, 1, 53, 16, 831923)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 14, 12, 49, 52, 517625)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 8, 12, 14, 29, 190339)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 5, 14, 57, 43, 753104)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 10, 3, 6, 48, 444545)
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, 3, 6, 17, 51, 19, 710229)
datetime.datetime(2024, 2, 29, 0, 17, 8, 142468)
datetime.datetime(2024, 2, 2, 17, 51, 52, 265366)
datetime.datetime(2024, 1, 21, 3, 48, 8, 186623)
datetime.datetime(2024, 2, 9, 19, 20, 56, 600120)
day_of_month() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.day_of_month()
...
'12'
'03'
'19'
'14'
'19'
day_of_week()
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.day_of_week()
...
'lunes'
'jueves'
'lunes'
'sábado'
'viernes'
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, 4, 12)
datetime.date(2024, 4, 9)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 31)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 26)
datetime.date(2024, 4, 2)
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, 4, 13, 4, 32, 48, 594731)
datetime.datetime(2024, 4, 10, 14, 17, 25, 54467)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 31, 11, 22, 29, 116942)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 26, 14, 58, 59, 957843)
datetime.datetime(2024, 4, 3, 4, 40, 51, 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()
...
'2015-10-12T06:37:39.857333'
'2011-02-03T03:31:05.288621'
'1992-10-19T16:15:48.411357'
'1984-01-14T18:33:49.891452'
'1997-09-19T16:15:39.473505'
month() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.month()
...
'10'
'02'
'10'
'01'
'09'
month_name()
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.month_name()
...
'octubre'
'febrero'
'octubre'
'enero'
'septiembre'
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, 3, 12)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 9)
datetime.date(2024, 2, 29)
datetime.date(2024, 2, 24)
datetime.date(2024, 3, 2)
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, 3, 14, 4, 32, 47, 594731)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 11, 14, 17, 24, 54467)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 1, 11, 22, 28, 116942)
datetime.datetime(2024, 2, 25, 14, 58, 58, 957843)
datetime.datetime(2024, 3, 4, 4, 40, 50, 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()
...
'06:37:39'
'03:31:05'
'16:15:48'
'18:33:49'
'16:15:39'
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(6, 37, 39, 857333)
datetime.time(3, 31, 5, 288621)
datetime.time(16, 15, 48, 411357)
datetime.time(18, 33, 49, 891452)
datetime.time(16, 15, 39, 473505)
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 by precision. 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 0x7f6d0056c9e0>
<generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7f6d0056c9e0>
<generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7f6d0056c9e0>
<generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7f6d0056c9e0>
<generator object Provider.time_series at 0x7f6d0056c9e0>
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()
...
1444631859.8573332
1296703865.2886207
719511348.4113573
442953229.8914522
874685739.4735047
year() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.year()
...
'2015'
'2011'
'1992'
'1984'
'1997'

faker.providers.internet

class faker.providers.internet.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

ascii_company_email() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.ascii_company_email()
...
'aalbornoz@castrospa.cl'
'tzepeda@franciscomorales.com'
'hidalgosebastian@gruposoto.cl'
'riveramargarita@laboratorioaravena.org'
'roblesmaximiliano@sotospa.com'
ascii_email() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.ascii_email()
...
'gmunoz@yahoo.com'
'andrew59@gmail.com'
'rosa19@alvearpalma.com'
'barrazahoracio@hotmail.com'
'wbustamante@yahoo.com'
ascii_free_email() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.ascii_free_email()
...
'aalbornoz@gmail.com'
'delfina76@yahoo.com'
'nfigueroa@hotmail.com'
'franciscamardones@hotmail.com'
'gisselle89@gmail.com'
ascii_safe_email() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.ascii_safe_email()
...
'aalbornoz@example.org'
'delfina76@example.com'
'nfigueroa@example.net'
'franciscamardones@example.net'
'gisselle89@example.org'
company_email() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.company_email()
...
'aalbornoz@castrospa.cl'
'tzepeda@franciscomorales.com'
'hidalgosebastian@gruposoto.cl'
'riveramargarita@laboratorioaravena.org'
'roblesmaximiliano@sotospa.com'
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:

str

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.dga()
...
'hxqvaffcmfsccynscisxeajjagjahtnfcmfsccynscisxeajjagjahtnfcmfscc.org'
'meydkrgdcvulautulqvjofrrnbjkfmvrewtpfttqcjafdhxckmyfamohcpnldug.org'
'iiulfpgbvqcdaehnqkbxmaqgkykorlxnwy.net'
'cpyhexmtvewxpwiiaxtgdfajuhbsyaaykvgkgreki.com'
'uqniukqjckmjabijnuqho.com'
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()
...
'valentinakaren.org'
'franciscomorales.com'
'proyectosveliz.com'
'sotodiaz.cl'
'holdingalarcon.cl'
domain_word() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.domain_word()
...
'valentinakaren'
'ferreirafigueroa'
'grupomorales'
'gruposoto'
'elizabethlucia'
email(safe: bool = True, domain: str | None = None) str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.email()
...
'aalbornoz@example.org'
'delfina76@example.com'
'nfigueroa@example.net'
'franciscamardones@example.net'
'gisselle89@example.org'
free_email() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.free_email()
...
'aalbornoz@gmail.com'
'delfina76@yahoo.com'
'nfigueroa@hotmail.com'
'franciscamardones@hotmail.com'
'gisselle89@gmail.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.castrospa.cl'
'laptop-47.acevedoy.com'
'desktop-21.alvearpalma.com'
'desktop-11.godoyy.cl'
'lt-38.juanmartin.cl'
http_method() str

Returns random HTTP method https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Methods

Return type:

str

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:

int

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:

str

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:

str

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:

str

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

Return type:

list[str]

Examples:

>>> 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:

int

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:

str

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()
...
'aalbornoz@example.org'
'delfina76@example.com'
'nfigueroa@example.net'
'franciscamardones@example.net'
'gisselle89@example.org'
slug(value: str | None = None) str

Django algorithm

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.slug()
...
'molestiae-nihil'
'facilis-quaerat'
'necessitatibus'
'perferendis-magnam'
'esse-quae-deserunt'
tld() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.tld()
...
'cl'
'cl'
'com'
'org'
'cl'
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://edelmirafigueroa.net/categorylogin.jsp'
'http://gruposoto.cl/mainfaq.htm'
'http://juanmartin.cl/search/tagsmain.asp'
'http://proyectosespinoza.cl/wp-content/searchauthor.html'
'http://www.ramosneira.net/list/exploreregister.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://castrospa.cl/'
'https://franciscomorales.com/'
'http://gruposoto.cl/'
'http://manuelparedes.org/'
'http://www.clubahumada.com/'
user_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.user_name()
...
'aalbornoz'
'castroteresa'
'tzepeda'
'nfigueroa'
'franciscamardones'

faker.providers.job

class faker.providers.job.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

job() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.job()
...
'Técnico en asistencia al usuario de tecnología de la información y las comunicaciones'
'Geólogo'
'Recolector de basura y material reciclable'
'Trabajador comunitario de la salud'
'Ingeniero de minas'

faker.providers.person

class faker.providers.person.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

first_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.first_name()
...
'Lilian'
'Mercedes'
'Mario'
'Daniela'
'Teresa'
first_name_female() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.first_name_female()
...
'Magaly'
'Violeta'
'Florencia'
'Valentina'
'Agustina'
first_name_male() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.first_name_male()
...
'Leandro'
'Marcos'
'Pablo'
'Cristian'
'Jaime'
first_name_nonbinary() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.first_name_nonbinary()
...
'Lilian'
'Mercedes'
'Mario'
'Daniela'
'Teresa'
given_name() str

Generates a composite given name with two unique names

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.given_name()
...
'Violeta Florencia'
'Flora Antonella'
'Edelmira Antonia'
'Oscar Pedro'
'Andrés Víctor'
given_name_female() str

Generates a composite female given name with two unique names

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.given_name_female()
...
'Magaly Violeta'
'Florencia Valentina'
'Agustina Gloria'
'Bernardita Marcela'
'Josefa Karina'
given_name_male() str

Generates a composite male given name with two unique names

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.given_name_male()
...
'Leandro Marcos'
'Pablo Cristian'
'Jaime Daniel'
'Gaspar Matías'
'Mario Guillermo'
language_name() str

Generate a random i18n language name (e.g. English).

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.language_name()
...
'Letón'
'Maltés'
'Aimara'
'Igbo'
'Romanche'
last_name() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.last_name()
...
'Hermosilla'
'Albornoz'
'Romero'
'Castro'
'Valdés'
last_name_female() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.last_name_female()
...
'Hermosilla'
'Albornoz'
'Romero'
'Castro'
'Valdés'
last_name_male() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.last_name_male()
...
'Hermosilla'
'Albornoz'
'Romero'
'Castro'
'Valdés'
last_name_nonbinary() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.last_name_nonbinary()
...
'Hermosilla'
'Albornoz'
'Romero'
'Castro'
'Valdés'
name() str
Example:

‘John Doe’

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.name()
...
'Florencia Castro Valdés'
'Matías Aravena Acevedo'
'Juana Violeta Hidalgo Valenzuela'
'Pilar Bórquez-Herrera Barraza'
'Bárbara Rodríguez Alarcón'
name_female() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.name_female()
...
'Violeta Romero'
'Agustina Gloria Barra Tapia'
'Karina Lía Yáñez Vásquez'
'Valeria Valenzuela Oyarce'
'Pilar Bórquez-Herrera Barraza'
name_male() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.name_male()
...
'Marcos Romero'
'Jaime Daniel Barra Tapia'
'Guillermo Rigoberto Yáñez Vásquez'
'Andrés Valenzuela Oyarce'
'Richard Bórquez-Herrera Barraza'
name_nonbinary() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.name_nonbinary()
...
'formats_female'
'formats_female'
'formats_male'
'formats_male'
'formats_female'
prefix() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.prefix()
...
'Doña'
'Dr.'
'Doña'
'Doña'
'Sra.'
prefix_female() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.prefix_female()
...
'Doña'
'Doña'
'Srta.'
'Dra.'
'Doña'
prefix_male() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.prefix_male()
...
'Dr.'
'Dr.'
'Sr.'
'Dr.'
'Don'
prefix_nonbinary() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.prefix_nonbinary()
...
'Doña'
'Dr.'
'Doña'
'Doña'
'Sra.'
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()
...
''
''
''
''
''
suffix_male() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.suffix_male()
...
''
''
''
''
''
suffix_nonbinary() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.suffix_nonbinary()
...
''
''
''
''
''

faker.providers.phone_number

class faker.providers.phone_number.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

According to official specs: https://www.bcn.cl/leychile/navegar?i=173931 https://www.itu.int/itudoc/itu-t/number/c/chl/76483_ww9-es.doc https://www.subtel.gob.cl/base_numeracion/tabla_numeracion_ido_idd.xlsx

cellphone_block() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.cellphone_block()
...
'8'
'8'
'2'
'6'
'9'
country_calling_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.country_calling_code()
...
'+687'
'+595'
'+880'
'+964'
'+41'
landline_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.landline_code()
...
'57'
'58'
'33'
'51'
'64'
msisdn() str

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSISDN

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.msisdn()
...
'6048764759382'
'2194892411578'
'5659387784080'
'6097535139332'
'1158714841858'
phone_number() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.phone_number()
...
'+56 58 350 4876'
'+56 55 339 3824'
'+56 2 2294 8924'
'+56 600 757 815'
'+56 71 253 8778'
special_code() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.special_code()
...
'800'
'800'
'600'
'800'
'800'

faker.providers.ssn

class faker.providers.ssn.es_CL.Provider(generator: Any)

Bases: Provider

A Faker provider for the Chilean VAT IDs, also known as RUTs.

Sources:

company_rut() str
Returns:

a random Chilean RUT between 60.000.000 and 99.999.999

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.company_rut()
...
'85.853.374-0'
'88.224.081-9'
'62.716.860-8'
'77.375.608-2'
'94.311.065-4'
person_rut() str
Returns:

a random Chilean RUT between a 10 and 31.999.999 range

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.person_rut()
...
'28.334.105-4'
'12.926.697-K'
'25.432.739-5'
'29.871.639-9'
'14.112.050-6'
rut(min: int = 10, max: int = 99999999) str

Generates a RUT within the specified ranges, inclusive.

Parameters:
  • min – Minimum RUT to generate.

  • max – Maximum RUT to generate.

Returns:

a random Chilean RUT between 35.000.000 and 99.999.999

Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.rut()
...
'51.706.759-8'
'56.448.172-6'
'5.433.731-0'
'34.751.227-3'
'68.622.141-5'
ssn() str
Examples:

>>> Faker.seed(0)
>>> for _ in range(5):
...     fake.ssn()
...
'604-87-6475'
'824-21-9489'
'411-57-8156'
'938-77-8408'
'160-97-5351'