I'm not yet familiar with Orca, but to say NVDA is written in python is
misleading. Most
of it is in python, but there are core portions which are written in C++. So,
yes, I would say
that if Orca is written purely in python, it probably does affect its
performance.
-Brian
>But I agree with your general point that the actual source of latency
>should be investigated, and not just assume that it's probably the
>language that is bad. Python by itself won't arbitrarily introduce
>milliseconds of latency. By prioritizing what is important, the
>processing cost can be mitigated. NVDA also is in python, does that hurt
>there?
>
>Samuel
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