How do I use uncompyle6











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I am new to Python. I have version 2.7.11 installed on my MacBook Pro, running Yosemite 10.10.5. I am trying to figure this out because I would like to decompile the scripts to the Native Instruments Maschine, take a look at them and create some of my own for use with Ableton Live.



I can't seem to get any further than the fact the uncompyle2, uncompyle6 and spark-parser have all been downloaded into my .../Python/2.7/site-packages folder. Typing in the shell $ uncompyle -h doesn't do anything either.



I'm stuck and this is starting to increase the fury inside and I'm afraid I may go on a terrible rampage if I don't figure this out. I've looked all over the interwebs and can't find a single, detailed explanation on how to do this. I need an explanation similar to Reddit's 'like I'm 5' so I can actually see and learn what I am doing.



If anyone can help I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you!










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  • Have you tried running the commands in the "Installation", "Testing", and "Usage" sections of github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6 ?
    – David Cary
    May 15 '16 at 2:47










  • @DavidCary I'm not really sure how to properly execute these commands in the terminal # Please explain like I'm 5.
    – satoprogrammer
    May 15 '16 at 4:47

















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I am new to Python. I have version 2.7.11 installed on my MacBook Pro, running Yosemite 10.10.5. I am trying to figure this out because I would like to decompile the scripts to the Native Instruments Maschine, take a look at them and create some of my own for use with Ableton Live.



I can't seem to get any further than the fact the uncompyle2, uncompyle6 and spark-parser have all been downloaded into my .../Python/2.7/site-packages folder. Typing in the shell $ uncompyle -h doesn't do anything either.



I'm stuck and this is starting to increase the fury inside and I'm afraid I may go on a terrible rampage if I don't figure this out. I've looked all over the interwebs and can't find a single, detailed explanation on how to do this. I need an explanation similar to Reddit's 'like I'm 5' so I can actually see and learn what I am doing.



If anyone can help I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you!










share|improve this question






















  • Have you tried running the commands in the "Installation", "Testing", and "Usage" sections of github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6 ?
    – David Cary
    May 15 '16 at 2:47










  • @DavidCary I'm not really sure how to properly execute these commands in the terminal # Please explain like I'm 5.
    – satoprogrammer
    May 15 '16 at 4:47















up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I am new to Python. I have version 2.7.11 installed on my MacBook Pro, running Yosemite 10.10.5. I am trying to figure this out because I would like to decompile the scripts to the Native Instruments Maschine, take a look at them and create some of my own for use with Ableton Live.



I can't seem to get any further than the fact the uncompyle2, uncompyle6 and spark-parser have all been downloaded into my .../Python/2.7/site-packages folder. Typing in the shell $ uncompyle -h doesn't do anything either.



I'm stuck and this is starting to increase the fury inside and I'm afraid I may go on a terrible rampage if I don't figure this out. I've looked all over the interwebs and can't find a single, detailed explanation on how to do this. I need an explanation similar to Reddit's 'like I'm 5' so I can actually see and learn what I am doing.



If anyone can help I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you!










share|improve this question













I am new to Python. I have version 2.7.11 installed on my MacBook Pro, running Yosemite 10.10.5. I am trying to figure this out because I would like to decompile the scripts to the Native Instruments Maschine, take a look at them and create some of my own for use with Ableton Live.



I can't seem to get any further than the fact the uncompyle2, uncompyle6 and spark-parser have all been downloaded into my .../Python/2.7/site-packages folder. Typing in the shell $ uncompyle -h doesn't do anything either.



I'm stuck and this is starting to increase the fury inside and I'm afraid I may go on a terrible rampage if I don't figure this out. I've looked all over the interwebs and can't find a single, detailed explanation on how to do this. I need an explanation similar to Reddit's 'like I'm 5' so I can actually see and learn what I am doing.



If anyone can help I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you!







installation terminal python osx-yosemite ableton-live






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asked May 15 '16 at 0:16









satoprogrammer

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612












  • Have you tried running the commands in the "Installation", "Testing", and "Usage" sections of github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6 ?
    – David Cary
    May 15 '16 at 2:47










  • @DavidCary I'm not really sure how to properly execute these commands in the terminal # Please explain like I'm 5.
    – satoprogrammer
    May 15 '16 at 4:47




















  • Have you tried running the commands in the "Installation", "Testing", and "Usage" sections of github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6 ?
    – David Cary
    May 15 '16 at 2:47










  • @DavidCary I'm not really sure how to properly execute these commands in the terminal # Please explain like I'm 5.
    – satoprogrammer
    May 15 '16 at 4:47


















Have you tried running the commands in the "Installation", "Testing", and "Usage" sections of github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6 ?
– David Cary
May 15 '16 at 2:47




Have you tried running the commands in the "Installation", "Testing", and "Usage" sections of github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6 ?
– David Cary
May 15 '16 at 2:47












@DavidCary I'm not really sure how to properly execute these commands in the terminal # Please explain like I'm 5.
– satoprogrammer
May 15 '16 at 4:47






@DavidCary I'm not really sure how to properly execute these commands in the terminal # Please explain like I'm 5.
– satoprogrammer
May 15 '16 at 4:47












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The command you run is called when you install uncompyle6 is uncompyle6, not uncompyle. The command you run when you install incompyle2 is uncompyle2.



Both of these programs require a compiled Python program. See this for a discussion of what the .pyo and .pyc extensions mean.



There was a bug in earlier versions of uncompyle6 that didn't install the script files correctly. So if uncompyle6 isn't found, try installing a newer package using pip install uncompyle6 (if you are using a virtual python setup) or sudo pip install uncompyle6 if you want to install system wide using the system python, as you probably want to do.






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    1 Answer
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    up vote
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    down vote













    The command you run is called when you install uncompyle6 is uncompyle6, not uncompyle. The command you run when you install incompyle2 is uncompyle2.



    Both of these programs require a compiled Python program. See this for a discussion of what the .pyo and .pyc extensions mean.



    There was a bug in earlier versions of uncompyle6 that didn't install the script files correctly. So if uncompyle6 isn't found, try installing a newer package using pip install uncompyle6 (if you are using a virtual python setup) or sudo pip install uncompyle6 if you want to install system wide using the system python, as you probably want to do.






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      The command you run is called when you install uncompyle6 is uncompyle6, not uncompyle. The command you run when you install incompyle2 is uncompyle2.



      Both of these programs require a compiled Python program. See this for a discussion of what the .pyo and .pyc extensions mean.



      There was a bug in earlier versions of uncompyle6 that didn't install the script files correctly. So if uncompyle6 isn't found, try installing a newer package using pip install uncompyle6 (if you are using a virtual python setup) or sudo pip install uncompyle6 if you want to install system wide using the system python, as you probably want to do.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        The command you run is called when you install uncompyle6 is uncompyle6, not uncompyle. The command you run when you install incompyle2 is uncompyle2.



        Both of these programs require a compiled Python program. See this for a discussion of what the .pyo and .pyc extensions mean.



        There was a bug in earlier versions of uncompyle6 that didn't install the script files correctly. So if uncompyle6 isn't found, try installing a newer package using pip install uncompyle6 (if you are using a virtual python setup) or sudo pip install uncompyle6 if you want to install system wide using the system python, as you probably want to do.






        share|improve this answer














        The command you run is called when you install uncompyle6 is uncompyle6, not uncompyle. The command you run when you install incompyle2 is uncompyle2.



        Both of these programs require a compiled Python program. See this for a discussion of what the .pyo and .pyc extensions mean.



        There was a bug in earlier versions of uncompyle6 that didn't install the script files correctly. So if uncompyle6 isn't found, try installing a newer package using pip install uncompyle6 (if you are using a virtual python setup) or sudo pip install uncompyle6 if you want to install system wide using the system python, as you probably want to do.







        share|improve this answer














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        share|improve this answer








        edited May 23 '17 at 12:41









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        answered Jul 16 '16 at 14:58









        rocky

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