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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.9711759 [View]
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9711759

>>9711587
It's normal for cs majors

>> No.9661181 [View]
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9661181

>>9661163
>why isn't math for CS like math for mathematicians

Same reason why math for business majors isn't like math for mathematicians

>> No.9624265 [View]
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9624265

>>9624260
It's how European kids learn to multiply without memorizing stupid tables. It's also the same algorithm as repeated squaring.

cpp.sh/6bztc
>Enter x: 4
>Enter y: 5
>x*y = 20
>y^x = 625

>> No.9586234 [View]
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9586234

>>9584311
>Is it even possible to learn this in 2 years, with only knowing pre-calc?
>it wants this shit from me with a gpa of 3.7+ IN ORDER TO BE CONSIDERED FOR A TRANSFER FROM COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Of course.

>First Semester
ENG 101 College Composition I (3 credits)
MTH 121 Calculus I (4 credits)
CHM 101 General Chemistry I (4 credits)
CHM 103 General Chemistry Lab (1 credits)
ECO 101 Principles of Micro-Economics (3 credits)

>Second Semester
ENG 102 College Composition II (3 credits)
MTH 122 Calculus II (4 credits)
CHM 102 General Chemistry II (4 credits)
ECO 102 Principles of Macro-Economics (3 credits)
Humanistic art or music requirement (one 3-credit course)

>Third Semester
MTH 221 Multivarible Calculus III (4 credits)
PHY 201 General Physics I (4 credits)
Historical requirement (3 credits)
Humanistic literature requirement (one 3-credit course)
Society & Human Behavior requirement (one 3-credit course)

>Fourth Semester
MTH 222 Differential Equations (4 credits)
MTH 223 Introduction to Linear Algebra (3 credits)
PHY 202 General Physics II (4 credits)
Major elective (one 3- or 4-credit course)
Major elective (one 3- or 4-credit course)

>> No.9487202 [DELETED]  [View]
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9487202

>>9487200
>i

Sorry, you're too retarded

>> No.9450262 [View]
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9450262

>>9450254
>I and all my classmates found advanced courses hard so there's no way they can be trivial
>t. brainlet CS majors

>> No.9449619 [View]
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>>9448642
CS belong in >>>/g/

>> No.9314836 [View]
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>>9314825
>compsci major so not brainlet tho

>>>/g/tfo

>> No.9258582 [View]
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>>9258432

>> No.9173867 [View]
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>>9173777
>>>/g/tfo

>> No.8991080 [View]
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8991080

>>8988349
>I'm mostly interested in CS, but I love anything that requires intellect

>> No.8935488 [View]
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>>8935418

>> No.8677755 [View]
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>>8677666

>> No.8266453 [View]
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>>8266444
>Mathematics Requirements in Computer Science
>While nearly all undergraduate programs in computer science include mathematics courses in their curricula, the full set of such requirements varies broadly by institution due to a number of factors. For example, whether or not a CS program is housed in a School of Engineering can directly influence the requirements for courses on calculus and/or differential equations, even if such courses include far more material in these areas than is generally needed for most CS majors. As a result, CS2013 only specifies mathematical requirements that we believe are directly relevant for the large majority of all CS undergraduates (for example, elements of set theory, logic, and discrete probability, among others). These mathematics requirements are specified in the Body of Knowledge primarily in the Discrete Structures Knowledge Area.

>We recognize that general facility with mathematics is an important requirement for all CS students. Still, CS2013 distinguishes between the foundational mathematics that are likely to impact many parts of computer science—and are included in the CS2013 Body of Knowledge—from those that, while still important, may be most directly relevant to specific areas within computing. For example, an understanding of linear algebra plays a critical role in some areas of computing such as graphics and the analysis of graph algorithms. However, linear algebra would not necessarily be a requirement for all areas of computing (indeed, many high quality CS programs do not have an explicit linear algebra requirement). Similarly, while we do note a growing trend in the use of probability and statistics in computing and believe that this trend is likely to continue in the future, we still believe it is not necessary for all CS programs to require a full course in probability theory for all majors.
>http://www.acm.org/education/curricula-recommendations

The hardest assured class is precalculus.

>> No.8256212 [View]
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>>8256181
>>>/g/tfo

>> No.8245187 [View]
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>>8245144
CS majors are the dumbest majors in any university.

>> No.8197927 [View]
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8197927

>>8197919
>intelligence
>Computer science

pick one

>> No.8111327 [View]
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>>8111319
kek

I reread after posting and knew someone would pick me up on that.

>> No.7938901 [View]
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7938901

>>7938875
Nice try.

I used it to view a question about projects you could work on with C that use graphic libraries and, since you need to make an account to use it, I made an account and now receive these emails.

You compsci faggots make me laugh

>> No.7904911 [View]
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>>7904898
See, that's exactly what I meant. You're insecure.

>> No.7904345 [View]
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7904345

Before you reply with 'code monkeys' and baby math, I'm not discussing undergraduate studies in CS. I'm wanting to know why CS is considered meme-studies at the graduate level.

This disregards fields such as,

>Combinatorics
>Proof Theory
>Recursion theory
>Graph theory
>Algorithms
>Computational Complexity
>Computational number theory
>Computational Geometry
>Cryptography
>Machine Learning
>Etc.

>> No.7903556 [DELETED]  [View]
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7903556

CS is not a meme.

Every argument that CS is a meme boils down to:

>CS are code monkeys

>Highest math class CS majors take are baby logic, baby discrete math and calculus

>A Math major could solve all major problems in Algorithms, Discrete math easily

>Whenever someone says CS is hard they compare it to graduate courses

>Everyone in CS wants to be a game developer

>The math in Algorithms and Computational Complexity is easy

>etc.

Let's clear the air here. The person (yes mainly one faggot) that claims this failed real analysis and couldn't crack number theory. Shame his faggotry and whenever he shitpost CS-memes call him out for the faggot he is.

>> No.7741506 [View]
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>>7740637

>> No.7578159 [View]
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7578159

>>7577876

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