JD Decompiler
JD (Java Decompiler) is a decompiler for the Java programming language. JD is provided as a GUI tool as well as in the form of plug-ins for the Eclipse (JD-Eclipse) and IntelliJ IDEA (JD-IntelliJ) integrated development environments.
Original author(s) | Emmanuel Dupuy |
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Stable release | JD-Core 1.1.3 JD-GUI 1.6.6 JD-Eclipse 2.0.0 JD-IntelliJ 0.6 |
Written in | Java |
Platform | Cross-platform |
Available in | English |
Type | Software engineering |
License | GNU GPL 3 |
Website | java-decompiler |
JD supports most versions of Java from 1.1.8 through 1.7.0 as well as JRockit 90_150, Jikes 1.2.2, Eclipse Java Compiler and Apache Harmony and is thus often used where formerly the popular JAD was operated.
Variants
In 2011, Alex Kosinsky initiated a variant[1] of JD-Eclipse which supports the alignment of decompiled code by the line numbers of the originals, which are often included in the original Bytecode as debug information.
In 2012, a branch of JDEclipse-Realign by Martin "Mchr3k" Robertson[2] extended the functionality by manual decompilation control and support for Eclipse 4.2 (Juno).
See also
References
- Alex Kosinsky: Realignment for JD-Eclipse. Version 1.0.2 of September 4th, 2011. Accessed March 30th, 2013. Hosted by SourceForge.
- Martin "Mchr3k" Robertson: JDEclipse-Realign. Version 1.1.2 of January 6th, 2013. Accessed March 30th, 2013. Hosted by GitHub.