Comment by klipklop 1 day ago Using LLM's in an "agentic loop" is indeed a game changer. Give it a try in a sandbox. 3 comments klipklop Reply galangalalgol 1 day ago Is the idea that once you isolate a function it decompiles it and then iterates changes until either the recompiled asm matches? msephton 18 hours ago That's one way. I'm not certain that's the way you'd project did it, hard to say without looking at the pipeline. But there are N64 "matching decompilation" projects that do it exactly the way you propose. alberto-m 12 hours ago Thanks, I will have a look at it! Even just updating my jargon vocabulary fells like an improvement.
galangalalgol 1 day ago Is the idea that once you isolate a function it decompiles it and then iterates changes until either the recompiled asm matches? msephton 18 hours ago That's one way. I'm not certain that's the way you'd project did it, hard to say without looking at the pipeline. But there are N64 "matching decompilation" projects that do it exactly the way you propose.
msephton 18 hours ago That's one way. I'm not certain that's the way you'd project did it, hard to say without looking at the pipeline. But there are N64 "matching decompilation" projects that do it exactly the way you propose.
alberto-m 12 hours ago Thanks, I will have a look at it! Even just updating my jargon vocabulary fells like an improvement.
Is the idea that once you isolate a function it decompiles it and then iterates changes until either the recompiled asm matches?
That's one way. I'm not certain that's the way you'd project did it, hard to say without looking at the pipeline. But there are N64 "matching decompilation" projects that do it exactly the way you propose.
Thanks, I will have a look at it! Even just updating my jargon vocabulary fells like an improvement.