ILSpy
shapez.io
Our great sponsors
ILSpy | shapez.io | |
---|---|---|
42 | 87 | |
19,989 | 6,135 | |
2.3% | 1.4% | |
9.2 | 0.0 | |
about 7 hours ago | about 1 month ago | |
C# | JavaScript | |
Copyright 2011-2015 AlphaSierraPapa | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ILSpy
-
C# Testing Playgrounds for old versions?
Well, it might not be exactly what you're asking for, but ILSpy lets you choose what version of C# you wish to decompile an assembly to. This is great for learning how a specific feature used to be coded in C# prior to some new syntax/compiler feature being added.
- Regex Engine Internals as a Library
- How to make mods?
-
I made a DLL INteroreter that Allows the user to invoke methods with parameters in ANY DLL File
You will thoroughly enjoy this, then.
- Learning how to mod
-
The Rider IDE is able to disassemble C# code into High-level C#, Low-level C#, and IL. Is there a command line tool that can do this too, or is this proprietary?
I've only used their GUI frontend myself, but ILSpy is also available as a library and command line tool.
-
What does Realm.Fody do?
As you can see IL code is not exactly human readable, and it's also quite verbose. If you want to have an idea of how your code looks like in IL you can use a decompiler tool such as JustDecompile or ILSpy.
-
GDScript Export Mode usage for commercial or online games
Take a random piece of C# software, run it through ILSpy, and be amazed at the results.
-
What’s your favorite dev story so far in your career?
My job was simple: using the trial .exe, reverse-engineer their file format. Simple enough - I love this shit. The biggest roadblock: the trial version doesn't allow you to save files, so we were kind of screwed. Then, after a few minutes of playing around, I noticed that the UI looks suspiciously familiar to a .NET program. So I went to Google to see if there's any .NET disassemblers out there, and luckily, there is! I opened the .exe in the disassembler, and next thing I knew I was looking at .NET intermediate code. My next step: figure out how to enable the save button. Turns out the "trial version" is actually the full program, just with an additional routine at the beginning that checks for a license. I was able to find this in the IC, and found the exact point at which trial mode is activated: a single jump statement. I simply turned this into a NOOP, re-assembled the binary, and next thing I knew, I had successfully hacked one of our competitors' software.
-
Documentation of the .cia file format and 3DS injection
Those apps are written in .NET and are compiled to CIL, which is easily decompilable with a tool such as ILSpy or the Mono disassembler
shapez.io
-
Niagara Launcher
You can pay for FOSS software. I do it to support FOSS developers and maintainers.
software example: Krita https://store.steampowered.com/app/280680/Krita/ source code https://invent.kde.org/graphics/krita
game example: Shapez https://store.steampowered.com/app/1318690/shapez/ https://github.com/tobspr-games/shapez.io
-
Any free games similar to factorio?
It's free on github too :P
-
Would it be a really bad idea to make your game open source? Give it a forum where anyone can commission features, and ask for donations from players/ modders to fund managing and debugging the project, keeping it a coherent whole.
Hmm, like Thrive and Shapez.io?
- What open source games do you play?
-
Factorio alternatives?
The game is also open source, so if you know your way around Node.js stuff, you could check out the source code and compile the full non-demo game and play it free of charge: https://github.com/tobspr/shapez.io
- I'm creating "Game Codebase Tours" – source code walkthroughs of finished game projects – in order to help new devs learn how a finished game is put together. Would anyone be interested?
-
What Open Source games do you thing that is the best?
shapez.io The only way to get it is to build from source or buy it on steam, but it's worth the few bucks.
-
[REQUEST] [STEAM] shapez.io
My Steam profile: Steam Profile Link to the game: shapez.io
-
[Guide] How to build shapez.io from source code (Windows)
On Arch Linux, to install all shapez.io dependencies you can run pacman -Syu nodejs yarn ffmpeg base-devel jre-openjdk curl as root. Then, building is relatively straightforward: - cd # return to home directory - git clone https://github.com/tobspr/shapez.io.git # clone the repo - cd shapez.io && yarn # install main modules - cd gulp && yarn && yarn gulp # install gulp modules and start build process
- shapez.io is 50% off on Steam ($4.99)
What are some alternatives?
dnSpy - .NET debugger and assembly editor [Moved to: https://github.com/dnSpy/dnSpy]
JustDecompile Engine - The decompilation engine of JustDecompile
dnSpy
Mindustry - The automation tower defense RTS
AvaloniaILSpy - Avalonia-based .NET Decompiler (port of ILSpy)
stack-overflow-import - Import arbitrary code from Stack Overflow as Python modules.
UndertaleModTool - The most complete tool for modding, decompiling and unpacking Undertale (and other Game Maker: Studio games!)
tModLoader - A mod to make and play Terraria mods. Supports Terraria 1.4 (and earlier) installations
goldberg_emulator
unity-astar - A Star (A*) algorithm in C# focused on performance and setup for Unity
Celeste - Celeste Bugs & Issue Tracker + some Source Code
reko - Reko is a binary decompiler.