> ROS messages are strongly typed. It's not really a question of Python > favoring duck-typing, because it has to express the type and > dependency requirements of what it interfaces with. the original request was to add a some user transparency to types by making the service_class field optional in the ServiceProxy class. this is possible because rospy can deduce the ros service type from the handshake. rosen, PS: it is interesting you mention Google Protocol Buffers; it seems that the usage and functionality of ros messages is converging to them. >> There are cases where being able to call a service without knowing its >> type could make it robust to the plethora of custom messages created >> by ROS users. >> >> As for overlooking package dependencies, with python this is not a >> problem. If the package path is sent with the type, then rospy can >> auto-generate the python class without relying on a pre-generated >> class to include; and I'm sure you can come up with a caching scheme >> to make this quicker the next time around. > > Google Protocol Buffers do auto-generate the Python class from their > description, so it is a possibility. However, the predominant request > I get is to make rospy have better performance and less latency. I'm > exploring whether or not rosh provides a natural boundary to express > these opposing requirements. > >  - Ken > _______________________________________________ > ros-users mailing list > ros-users@code.ros.org > https://code.ros.org/mailman/listinfo/ros-users >