Property lists, or plists, can contain data key-value pairs, which are binary property list files encoded in Base64. As they are, they’re impossible to parse and extract any meaningful data from. However, decoding them is very easy and you end up with a very nice looking pretty-printed property list file. Here’s how to decode data plist from a property list.
![Plist Plist](/uploads/1/1/7/8/117874386/432738237.png)
Decode data plist
Over the years your Mac will become older and will not support the newest Keka. Simply download and extract it, move it to the desktop and then open it.
What is plist Editor Pro? In the Mac OS X and iPhone OS, property list files are files that store serialized objects. Property list files use the filename extension.plist. Mac OS X 10.2 introduced a new format where property list files are stored as binary files. Starting with Mac OS X 10.4, this is the default format for preference files. Plist Extractor 1.2 for Mac can be downloaded from our website for free. This free Mac app is an intellectual property of jaqer.com. The following version: 1.2 is the most frequently downloaded one by the program users. Our antivirus check shows that this Mac download is virus free.
Plist Extractor 1.2.0 For Mac Pc
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Plist Extractor 1.2.0 For Mac Pro
- Extract the data from the plist file, using a text editor or other method of opening property list files.
You should end up with a block of encoded data that looks something like this. Line breaks are unimportant here, as is superfluous whitespace at the beginning or end of a line. I’ve stripped the whitespace and the line breaks to produce this. - Decode this using a Base64 decoder, such as this one. Paste in the encoded data block from the plist and click Decode. This will download a .bin file entitled DecodedBase64.bin, the contents of which is as follows. This is a plist, but it’s not the standard XML plist — instead, it’s a binary plist, as denoted by the bplist at the beginning of the file. This has decoded some of the words in the data, but it’s still not very easy to understand.
- Open the DecodedBase64.bin file with TextMate. This pretty-prints the binary property list as an old-style key-value plist.