You don't 'decrypt' the hashes because hashing is not encryption.
As for undoing the hash function to get the original string, there is no way to go from hash to original item, as hashing is a one-direction action. You can take an item and get a hash, but you can't take the hash and get the original item.
Make a note that hashes should NOT be confused with encryption; encryption is a different process where you can take an item, encrypt it with some type of key (either preshared or symmetric keys like PGP keys), and then later decrypt it. Hashes do not work that way.
In comments, you indicate that you're trying to save a passcode in the database. The problem is, you don't want someone who can breach the DB to be immediately be able to decrypt passcodes, which is why hashing is so attractive.
The idea, then, is that you would consider using salted hashes, storing only the salt on a per-user basis in the DB as its own record, and then store the salted hash of their original password string in the database.
Then, to verify a password is entered proper, get the salt from the DB, get the user input for a given password, and then using the salt from the DB, get the salted hash for that input. Take that resultant hash and compare it to the salted hash stored in the DB. If they match, you have a validated password; if they don't match, it's invalid.
This way, there's actually no decryption of any passwords readily doable, which means in a data breach situation of your site the passwords are not easily able to be retrieved. (This doesn't rule out someone breaching your database, copying down the data, and trying to brute-force the passwords, but depending on what you enforce for password complexity and the effort a hacker wants to actually go through to get credentials, this is less likely to happen)
I'd write an example of this in a language I understand, but as you don't define what language you're working with, it's not going to be possible for me to write a useful example for you here.
That said, if you're working with PHP, you may find this document on crackstation.net about doing secure salted password hashing properly; there's already PHP implementations to do this proper so you wouldn't have to write your own code, supposedly.