You have an old VLX file. The original source code ( .lsp or .prv ) is lost to a crashed hard drive, a former employee who left no documentation, or a vendor who went out of business ten years ago.
(defun c:... (/ ... ) (setq ... (getpoint ...)) (setq ... (getdist ... ...)) (entmake (list (cons 0 ...) (cons 10 ...) (cons 40 ...))) ) Result: You have no idea what ... is. You cannot edit this safely.
Stop wrestling with hex editors. Start reading your code again. That is what "better" truly means.
Better tools extract the exact DCL code, including tile hierarchies, actions, and key bindings. Furthermore, they reconstruct the callbacks—mapping which LISP function fires when a user clicks "OK." Without DCL recovery, you only have half the application. When VLX is compiled, the optimizer inlines short functions. This is great for runtime speed but terrible for reading.
A better decompiler does not guess the compilation standard. It reads the VLX header signature, identifies the version of the Visual LISP engine used (e.g., 16.x vs 20.x), and swaps in the correct parser tree. This version-aware architecture means a VLX created in AutoCAD 2020 decompiles as cleanly as one from AutoCAD 2008. You cannot maintain a VLX if you cannot see its dialog boxes. A surprising number of decompilers ignore the Dialog Control Language (DCL) section of the VLX.
If you have a folder of forgotten .vlx files sitting on a server, waiting for the day they break—that day is today. But for the first time, you have a real solution. Download a modern VLX decompiler (look for tools updated in the last 24 months, not 2012). Test it on a non-critical VLX. You will see the difference immediately: cleaner output, full DCL recovery, and actual variable names.
(defun c:DRAWCIRC ( / pt rad) (setq pt (getpoint "Center: ")) (setq rad (getdist pt "Radius: ")) (entmake (list (cons 0 "CIRCLE") (cons 10 pt) (cons 40 rad))) )
You tried the old decompilers. They gave you gibberish. They crashed on modern AutoCAD 2025. They failed to handle complex DCL dialogues or ActiveX methods.
Vlx Decompiler Better May 2026
You have an old VLX file. The original source code ( .lsp or .prv ) is lost to a crashed hard drive, a former employee who left no documentation, or a vendor who went out of business ten years ago.
(defun c:... (/ ... ) (setq ... (getpoint ...)) (setq ... (getdist ... ...)) (entmake (list (cons 0 ...) (cons 10 ...) (cons 40 ...))) ) Result: You have no idea what ... is. You cannot edit this safely.
Stop wrestling with hex editors. Start reading your code again. That is what "better" truly means.
Better tools extract the exact DCL code, including tile hierarchies, actions, and key bindings. Furthermore, they reconstruct the callbacks—mapping which LISP function fires when a user clicks "OK." Without DCL recovery, you only have half the application. When VLX is compiled, the optimizer inlines short functions. This is great for runtime speed but terrible for reading.
A better decompiler does not guess the compilation standard. It reads the VLX header signature, identifies the version of the Visual LISP engine used (e.g., 16.x vs 20.x), and swaps in the correct parser tree. This version-aware architecture means a VLX created in AutoCAD 2020 decompiles as cleanly as one from AutoCAD 2008. You cannot maintain a VLX if you cannot see its dialog boxes. A surprising number of decompilers ignore the Dialog Control Language (DCL) section of the VLX.
If you have a folder of forgotten .vlx files sitting on a server, waiting for the day they break—that day is today. But for the first time, you have a real solution. Download a modern VLX decompiler (look for tools updated in the last 24 months, not 2012). Test it on a non-critical VLX. You will see the difference immediately: cleaner output, full DCL recovery, and actual variable names.
(defun c:DRAWCIRC ( / pt rad) (setq pt (getpoint "Center: ")) (setq rad (getdist pt "Radius: ")) (entmake (list (cons 0 "CIRCLE") (cons 10 pt) (cons 40 rad))) )
You tried the old decompilers. They gave you gibberish. They crashed on modern AutoCAD 2025. They failed to handle complex DCL dialogues or ActiveX methods.