Sometimes, extracted .pyc files are missing their "magic number" (a header that identifies the Python version used). If a decompiler fails:
: Open your terminal or command prompt in the folder containing both the script and your .exe file. Run the following command: python pyinstxtractor.py your_program.exe Use code with caution.
: Use PyCDC (Decompile++) or Pylingual . Tools like uncompyle6 do not support the newer bytecode structures introduced in Python 3.9+. Manual Fix: The "Magic Number" convert exe to py
Once you have the .pyc (compiled Python bytecode) files, you need a decompiler to turn them back into readable Python code.
: Get the pyinstxtractor.py script from the official GitHub repository. Sometimes, extracted
Converting a Windows executable (.exe) back into Python source code (.py) is a two-step reverse-engineering process: the compiled bytecode from the executable and then decompiling that bytecode into readable text.
Open a known-working .pyc file (from the same extracted folder) in a hex editor like HxD . Copy the first 12–16 bytes (the header). : Use PyCDC (Decompile++) or Pylingual
The most reliable tool for extracting the contents of a PyInstaller-generated executable is PyInstaller Extractor (pyinstxtractor) .