I have an application which has .py files inside it (it's a developer tool and the python executable must be provided by the user).
This means that when the user executes the application .pyc files are generated inside it (it's not possible to pre-generate those because the user can select the python interpreter he wants to use and having the .pyc for all existing python interpreters is unwieldy).
So, I can sign and execute the application and all works well initially, but after the user executes code the notarization is no longer valid due to the pycache and .pyc files generated internally.
Is there a way out to make the notarization work in this scenario?