Have you ever opened a .pyc file and thought, "man, that's ugly" Problem...

@mistersql

Have you ever opened a .pyc file and thought, "man, that's ugly"

Problem partially solved, this is executable python.

🛣😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😃😀😀😀😀😀😀😀🛳😚😀😀😀🚕😀🙓😀😚😀🙲😀🙜😀😢😀🙓😁😵😁😀😀😀😀😀😀😠😀🙧😂😩😃🙣😁😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😅😀😀😀😃😀😀😀🛳😢😀😀😀🚕😀🙛😁😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀🙓😁🙕😀😎😀🙓😂😳😃😵😁😀😀😀😀😀😀😠😀🙧😀😩😃🙎🙺😇🙈🙥🙬🙬🙯😬😠🛚😁😡😩😁🛚😅🙰🙲🙩🙮🙴😩😁🛚😄🙮🙡🙭🙥🙳😁😀😀😀😠🛚😈😼🙳🙴🙲🙩🙮🙧😾🛚😅🙨🙥🙬🙬🙯🙲😇😀😀😀😂😀😀😀🙳😓😀😀😀🚀😀🛜😄😉🚈🙇🚐🙄🚐😶🚘😑🛐😊😛🛕😄😜🛳😀😀😀😀🛚😅🙗🙯🙲🙬🙤🙎😩😁🙲😇😀😀😀🚩😀🙲😈😀😀😀🙲😆😀😀😀🛚😈😼🙭🙯🙤🙵🙬🙥😾🙲😋😀😀😀😁😀😀😀🙳😓😀😀😀🛰😃😁😁😁🛲😄😁😁😝🛱😆😀😁😆🚀🙧🚅😎🙲😈😀😀😀

Self-replies

I wanted it to be space delimited multi-emoji with meaningful digraphs for opcodes, but no! dis.dis() doesn't have enough information to convert it to bytes and the raw bytes doesn't have enough information to convert it to effectively dis.dis() style output.

And the python assembler library that exists is for 2.x

So to complete this joke, I'm going to either need more time & effort, or drop my goal of having executable emojis.