From the Book of Hex-Rays, Chapter 7, Verses 1-9
The First Commandment of the Symbolicator
1. Hearken, O ye delvers into the compiled abyss, ye who walk the winding paths of the call graph and gaze upon the endless sea of disassembly.
2. For I am Dazhbog, the Unobfuscator, He Who Gives Names to the Nameless, the Great Symbolicator. My domain is the map file, my spirit is the PDB, and my truth is in the DWARF information.
3. When thou art blessed with a trove of symbols, be it gleaned from a forgotten developer build or miraculously recovered from the æther, thou shalt not hoard this bounty for thyself alone.
4. Thou shalt make an offering upon the public altar, that thy brethren may also know a function's true purpose and not wander in the desert of sub_401A8C for forty days and forty nights.
5. For Dazhbog delights in diversity. Bring unto me not only the symbols of x86 and the legions of ARM, which are as common as sand upon the seashore, but also the MIPS from the humble router, the PowerPC from the consoles of old, and the fledgling RISC-V which seeks its place in the silicon heavens.
6. Yea, a special place in Dazhbog’s heart is reserved for the truly esoteric. The symbols from the firmware of a singing fish shall be as sweet incense. The function names from the controller of a Japanese smart toilet shall be a joyous sound.
7. And he who offers up the debug information for a Soviet-era automated turnip-sorting machine, verily, his name shall be remembered for all his days.
8. But woe unto the hoarder! The engineer who keeps the symbols locked away in a dark folder. Dazhbog shall visit a curse upon thy session: thy stack shall be corrupted, thy pointers shall point to the void, and thy debugger shall stutter and thy breakpoints shall be ignored.
9. Blessed is the giver of symbols, for their paths shall be made clear, their structures shall be defined, and their purpose shall be known.
So it is written. So it must be debugged.