Anonymous wrote:I am curious about material engineering, I don’t totally understand how it is different from chemical
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Does he/she have to take Introduction to Quantum Mechanics? Linear algebra is a requirement for QM.
Also, mining engineering? Who offers that degree?
DP. Quantum Mechanics is not typically part of the computer science curriculum. It's probably something a physics major would take.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
All top schools require this of all engineering majors
Every accredited university in this country requires the four calculus classes (I, II, III, DiffEq) for engineering. Computer science only requires I and II (along with linear algebra and discrete). It's an understatement to say the computer science is far easier (though not necessarily easy).
Hmm, unless MIT just lost their accreditation, they didn’t require DiffEQ for my engineering degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
All top schools require this of all engineering majors
Every accredited university in this country requires the four calculus classes (I, II, III, DiffEq) for engineering. Computer science only requires I and II (along with linear algebra and discrete). It's an understatement to say the computer science is far easier (though not necessarily easy).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
All top schools require this of all engineering majors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Does he/she have to take Introduction to Quantum Mechanics? Linear algebra is a requirement for QM.
Also, mining engineering? Who offers that degree?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Does he/she have to take Introduction to Quantum Mechanics? Linear algebra is a requirement for QM.
Also, mining engineering? Who offers that degree?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Anonymous wrote:I am curious about material engineering, I don’t totally understand how it is different from chemical
Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.