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More small history tweaks
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HISTORY.md
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HISTORY.md
@ -73,19 +73,19 @@ The project exists not only on
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the defunct [google
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code](https://code.google.com/archive/p/unpyc/). The git/svn history
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goes back to 2009. Somewhere in there the name was changed from
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"decompyle" "unpyc" by Keknehv and then to "uncompyle" by Guenther Starnberger.
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"decompyle" to "unpyc" by Keknehv, and then to "uncompyle" by Guenther Starnberger.
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The name Thomas Grainger isn't found in (m)any of the commits in the
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several years of active development. First Keknehv worked on this up
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to Python 2.5 or so while acceping Python bytecode back to 2.0 or
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so. Then hamled made a few commits earler on while Eike Siewertsen
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so. Then hamled made a few commits earler on, while Eike Siewertsen
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made a few commits later on. But mostly wibiti, and Guenther
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Starnberger got the code to where uncompyle2 was around 2012.
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This project, uncompyle6, however owes its existence to the fork of
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uncompyle2 by Myst herie (Mysterie) whose first commit seems to goes
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back to 2012. I chose this as it seemed to have been the most actively,
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if briefly, worked on.
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back to 2012. I chose this since it seemed to have been at that time
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the most actively, if briefly, worked on.
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Over the many years, code styles and Python features have
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changed. However brilliant the code was and still is, it hasn't really
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@ -100,12 +100,15 @@ Hartmut a decade an a half ago:
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NB. This is not a masterpiece of software, but became more like a hack.
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Probably a complete rewrite would be sensefull. hG/2000-12-27
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Lastly, I should mention [unpyc3](https://code.google.com/p/unpyc3/)
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and most especially [pycdc](https://github.com/zrax/pycdc), largely by
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Michael Hansen and Darryl Pogue. If they supported getting source-code
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fragments and I could call it from Python, I'd probably ditch this and
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use that. From what I've seen, the code runs blindingly fast and spans
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all versions of Python.
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This project deparses using a LR parse. However another approach is to
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do something like simulate execution symbolically and build expression
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trees off of stack results. The two important projects that work this
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way are [unpyc3](https://code.google.com/p/unpyc3/) and most
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especially [pycdc](https://github.com/zrax/pycdc) The latter project
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is largely by Michael Hansen and Darryl Pogue. If they supported
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getting source-code fragments and I could call it from Python, I'd
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probably ditch this and use that. From what I've seen, the code runs
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blindingly fast and spans all versions of Python.
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Tests for the project have been, or are being, culled from all of the
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projects mentioned.
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