"Learning" how to program is certainly NOT an application for reverse engineering! If you want to learn how to program, you should take a course in exactly that subject. I do imagine that there are some legal applications, but only few come to my mind. However, it does allow to understand some principles and is certainly used for another "illegal" activity: generation of patched and keygens. To do so, would probably take more time than simply writing a similar program from scratch. Fortunately VS code with the Auto Build Marlin extens. This code cannot be edited in a regular SDK and then compiled into a binary again, as it will miss information and be incomplete. UPDATE: Much of this is relevant, but you can no longer use Arduino to easily compile for 8 bit boards. Menus of Foccus program is developed for old cars. The trouble I see is that Foccus probably cant update vbf file on Ford new cars +2012. You will also have to checksum correct the file if its a modified non oem file. If correctly configured and used, they allow to convert a binary (in one of the supported CPU languages) into human readable source code (assembly language) and/or pseudo C code. Use WinOLS for VBF to BIN and BIN to VBF conversions. In your case, you have two options: IDA Pro (expensive) or Ghidra (open source). I have performed this on Linux before using the command: xxd -r -p mykey.hex > mykey. As already mentioned in both threads that you started, you can use a DECOMPILER. Some notes: 1) Reverse Engineering of software can be illegal, depending on the purpose: 2) Authors of software are not happy when people try to reverse engineer their work, which leads to the next important question: 3) What do you want to achieve? Why do you want to reverse engineer a binary file? While it is not an easy task, it is not impossible, to do so.
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