![]() ![]() And most likely: You are explicitly not wanted to! A decompilation or reverse-engineering of a program usually conflicts with the license conditions and is illegal. But you cannot get the source code as clear text. You can use the debugger to step through the code line by line, inspect changes to variables and get a list of called functions. ![]() No, there is no decoding method for P-coded functions. And does not seem to lead to any problems in getting work published in high ranking journals. ![]() This really, really bugs me, because it is not an exception but seems to be the standard way of doing it in my field (chemometrics). Furthermore since additional steps were taken by the authors to make a verification of the published algorithm harder it seems really fishy. In cases where the whole publication consists of a (natural language) description of an algorithm, one plot of input vectors and one plot of output vectors, imho it can not be verfied, that the algorithm does what is's supposed to do and the way it is described. ![]()
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