This gem does some CPF/CNPJ magic. It allows you to create, validate and format CPF/CNPJ, even through the command-line.
Just making my life easier when filling these damn numbers on internet bankings and government sites.
For ActiveModel/ActiveRecord validations, please check https://github.com/fnando/validators.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "cpf_cnpj"
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install cpf_cnpj
This library has the same API for both CNPJ/CPF, so only one of them is documented below.
Note
This library already supports the new alphanumeric CNPJ algorithm that will be available starting July 2026. For more information, see https://www.gov.br/receitafederal/pt-br/acesso-a-informacao/acoes-e-programas/programas-e-atividades/cnpj-alfanumerico.
require "cpf_cnpj"
CPF.format(number) # Format CPF (xxx.xxx.xxx-xx)
CPF.valid?(number) # Check if a CPF is valid
CPF.generate # Generate a random CPF number
CPF.generate(true) # Generate a formatted number
cpf = CPF.new(number)
cpf.formatted # Return formatted CPF (xxx.xxx.xxx-xx)
cpf.stripped # Return stripped CPF (xxxxxxxxxxx)
cpf.valid? # Check if CPF is valid
cpf.number_without_verifier # Return CPF without verifier digits
By default, validations will strip any characters that aren't numbers. This
means that 532#####820------857\n96
is considered a valid number. To perform a
strict validation use strict: true
.
CPF.valid?(number, strict: true)
This library gives you two binaries: cpf
and cnpj
.
$ cpf --check 532.820.857-96
$ $?
0
$ cpf --check 53282085796
$ $?
0
$ cpf --format 53282085796
532.820.857-96
$ cpf --strip 532.820.857-96
53282085796
$ cpf --generate
417.524.931-17
$ cpf --generate --strip
76001454809
$ echo 76001454809 | cpf -f
760.014.548-09
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am "Added some feature"
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request