My course also had a non-elective continuous mathematics unit alongside the discrete math one. Continuous math is still very important and will come up often in comp sci particularly in graphical programming or when trying to emulate real world physics.
This was very helpful! I was considering switching my intended major (Neuroscience) to computer science because I was interested in programming-this video helped me make a better decision to just keep my major and maybe do CS as a minor. CS as a major has TOO MUCH MATH that I have no interest, or patience, to learn. Thank you!
Hey, What's neuroscience like, I haven't researched it at all so would you mind giving me your thoughts about it in terms of what you actually learn, job prospects and employability etc.
@@Tururu134 probably not if she thought computer science had too much math. Neuroscience isn’t necessarily easy from what I understand. It’s normal to switch majors a lot though.
Oh gosh now I'm nervous I hope I can learn this because while it made sense when explained it flew right over my head when I tried to analyze it myself.
"Calculus comes very rarely" Not so sure about that. I'm a CS major and so far I've gone through 4 semesters of Calculus, that's 2 years of learning new ways to solve differential equations. Then had 2 semesters of fourier analysis, granted some of it was applied to signals and systems. Also went through probability and statistics to then learn about stochastic processes, which again is basically calculus, as well as optimisation (which, again, is a mix of calculus and linear algebra) for machine learning. And in the following semesters, I'll have to take classes in signal processing which again, is nothing but calculus for the most part. CS is just Math, not Math for its own sake like Math majors do, but Math needed by the industry. People who were looking forward to code 24/7 are the ones who struggle now, also CS students are not that good at programming for the most part, I mean we're obviously better than every other majors in the purely scientific field, but it's definitely not what we excel at: we're better at problem solving involving logic, information, data structures, graphs, and other kinds of discrete objects, but the coding part of it will most likely be left as an exercise to the technicians you will be working with, who probably know how to code better than you.
How hard is it to do more than 1 major? (I am just in my last school year and am close to doing my final school exams before graduating from my school and was curious about what I could do after school and wondered about the possibility of studying more than one thing if possible so that's why I am asking. And of course, you can just choose to not respond)
For those who would like to know how much math classes you have to take, I sum my case up here. (Well it got longer than I expected.) So in the first four semester you have about 50% mathrelated classes. We need to take Discrete Mathematics, Linear Algebra for CS, Analysis for CS, Mathematical Logic with are mostly pure mathematic, and there are classes that are theoretical and are mathematical too but a bit different: computability and complexity, formal systems and automation but there are also interesting classes, if you are not that much into math, like programming, computer engineering, which was mostly like an introduction to electrical engineering, operating system and systemsoftware, mostly about scheduling but we learned a bit C and bash, databases and information systems, software engineering and we had a lab where we wrote our own OS. Well, this is my case here in Aachen, Germany, where it gives you a good basis in the beginning of the Bachelor and later you can choose on what you want to specify on. I can't tell you much about what happens later as I only started studying two years ago. I have to tell you it is not easy and a whole another dimension than high school, but if you learn enough, I mean learn for real, not just two hours a day after the lectures, you can make it. But I guess how difficult it is, is really different depending on the country and city, so I can't tell how hard it is somewhere else. Atleast here you won't get much holidays, haha. But I hope it gets paid off later and studying could be enjoying too, if you are getting used to it after a while. But I guess in the beginning most people will be shocked of the maths, good luck.
This is a decent introduction to the theoretical foundations of computer science. Two other fundamental topics are programming languages/compilers, and operating systems. Every CS major will take some classes on those topics.
Your videos may just be the best I've come across on the subject at hand. I am in my last year of studying Computer Science in college, but I've developed an interest in Electrical and Computer Engineering after watching many Marvel movies and taking a Computer Architecture course. I've gleaned some useful information. Thank you!
I got to be honest. I was terrible at math in high school. Could barely pass each grade. I am 5 years out of high school and I have been feeling the urge to take up something like computer science. I am worried that I might still not be very good at math although I have learned a lot about myself since high school and one thing I have learned is that I can do anything I set my mind too.
Im a computer science student and we have to take Calculus courses and also Linear algebra and Number theory and Group theory as well , so we basicly study all major Math courses
You missed a few math courses, we, computer scientists have to take. We take Statistics and Probability I and II, Statistical Computing, Operations Research, Numerical Analysis, Linear Algebra, Calculus I and II, Set Theory, Mathematical Logic, Discreate Math (which was talked about), some students take Game Theory. At least those are the ones I had to take as a Computer Science major. Plus all the classes related to software and hardware.
Zach can you do a video about certain topics or related fields you need to know to be an algorithm developer. I've been looking on the internet and can't find anything that goes in depth of what you need to know.
I am still at high school and I LOVE MATH but I am thinking about getting a major in math and a major on one of the following subjects: mechanical engineering or computer science (informatics) . What should I choose; which of the two uses more math; (math is my favourite subject, however it is not the only subject I like .I also like physics and computer science and some programming that I do on my own)
3rd year is usually when you start branching off into specializations, such as software engineering (programming focus) , artificial intelligence (machine learning, etc), computer systems (hardware, assembly programming) , databases , theoretical computer science (more proofs and math) , etc.
Glad he didn't go into graphics, and how to write software make computer draw pictures and images that look so real, that in itself is another major field.
Funny, I actually learned that the reason they have you take calculus is to test your critical thinking abilities. Minimal of what you actually learn in calculus comes up past your third or fourth semester.
I think it's to maintain the fiction that computer science is a "science." It isn't. It's a highly specialized trade. Science studies the universe. Computer science invents more ways to make transistors do fancy tricks and then applies those tricks to life.
I really hate maths but for some reason I enjoy my Algorithms class, it can be a bit complicated for me at times, but its not all that bad. Although I really dislike my foundation maths for computing class, god--- I failed my mid-term, and that really threw me off and I started thinking if CS was really for me...
Anyone that knows for sure please answer this question. If I major in “electrical engineering and computer science” will I be learning a little bit of each or will I learn as much as an ee major and a cs major combined?
am really sad that I couldn't study CS and am already 25 now...am I too late for a career in CS if I am to again take 4 years learning CS? I love the math behind CS, I love the science behind CS, I love cryptography, I love the most things about CS...so far I learned web development by myself online, but I still feel I should have gone to UNI and took CS, it just kinda feels too late....web development is not that mesmerizing
We always think it’s too late. It’s a bad habit we humans tend to do. At 12 years old I was telling myself it was too late to learn an instrument. Just go for it. I’m 21 now.
Does highschool students get this? For me, a little. I must work hard because I want this course but I'm bad at math. Well, I need to learn math from now on along with CS.
Hi, Thanks for your useful videos. My BSC degree is Mechanical Engineering , if i change my major and study computer science in Masters degree, do you think the consequence is good or not ?
Im interested in circuits, micro-controllers,robotics, programming, n math. I don't know which engineering major to join, can anyone give me some advice please??
mechanical engineering with a mechatronics sub focus, he has a video about Mechanical Engineering (i think) "mechanical engineering vs electrical engineering" that explains it
logic in numbers is painful, so much easier just to use words to understand things, how do i get comfortable with using logic in numbers, is it just practise?
Ignore the last advice If you just want to build apps website don't go into computer science Building websites apps are not difficult, even high school students can learn it Its a waste of money to do computer science if your goal is to make sites, apps There are bootcamps for it Even if you want to be software engineer you can be one without computer science degree. 80% of what computer science degrees teach you will never be used in software jobs Computer science degrees are meant to give you basics to later go and do research in various things like Algorithms (which is basically Math research), Artificial Intelligence, Compiler, Graphics etc. All of these requires insane amount of maths and you'll be using programming only as a tool So don't take computer science if you don't wanna be a computer scientists Also one more stuff this guy said wrong is computer scientists focus on softwares (wrong). Computer scientists are researchers in Computer science like AI researchers ( who will have PhDs) just like phyiscs majors aren't called Physicists (a phd is needed), you need PhD and research to be called one So don't go into CS unless u wannabe a researcher. Software Engineering has low barrier to enter and you can do it by self learning Lot of Software Engineers are from math, physics or other engineering majors
I know I'm late, but I barely knew this stuff either- but I just discovered this video and I'm one semester done with my major, so now I know about some of the stuff he talked about, but we still haven't touched Euclid's Algorithm, or Knapsack.
Dude i lovee computer science but i am totally shit in maths like yeah i know 2 plus 2 is 5 but cmon dude u wont need such an easy math yeah i am searching that some one atleast some say in his video that u dont need to know much maths to do computer science but atleast they should say u will learn it during computer science like my mind is out of maths like it hangs when i think of maths lol
Well to detect an infinite loop,you'd need to wait till infinity,which is not feasible. So no it's not realistic to say anyone could detect an infinite loop because it,well,never ends.
A computer cannot detect an infinite loop, but a programmer can detect it when it the program produces a certain output that is traceable by looking at the math of your for loop.
BladeLution no one's stupid so you can take whatever you want that you have an interest in but analyze your choices first because it'll be hard if you take something not suitable with your learning skills and interests (like me, I'm more of a read, research, write kind of student but I got into a course where it isn't really needed, because execution of skills is more important which I suck at so yeah, avoid regrets)
syed ataulhai yes. Math in My opinion is very minimal in programming. Like with c++, JAVA, etc. You'll be fine. You don't have to go into computer science for programming. You could go into IT or IS.
some people were telling me if i want to do software engineering can do with CE, i live in India so is it same everywhere? finally what would u suggest if i wanna do software engg? ty :)
Yes that is the same in the US as well. A lot of CE's become software developers even though you'd think they would go on to do more hardware. You can take certain elective classes and apply for internships that are in the field of software engineering specifically which will help prepare you for a full time career.
This kind of math is very interesting for me. Never really favored math but math problems like these just makes my brain work!
Computer scientists really are just mathematicians who are desired in the workforce.
Computer science is a branch of mathematics, it just became a whole major to itself because it is very applicable in a specific industry.
imo computer science is a combination of mathematics and engineering
My course also had a non-elective continuous mathematics unit alongside the discrete math one. Continuous math is still very important and will come up often in comp sci particularly in graphical programming or when trying to emulate real world physics.
YES hahah
This was very helpful! I was considering switching my intended major (Neuroscience) to computer science because I was interested in programming-this video helped me make a better decision to just keep my major and maybe do CS as a minor. CS as a major has TOO MUCH MATH that I have no interest, or patience, to learn. Thank you!
Thanks for the comment! So glad to hear it helped.
Hey, What's neuroscience like, I haven't researched it at all so would you mind giving me your thoughts about it in terms of what you actually learn, job prospects and employability etc.
Well, you a neuroscientist now?
@@Tururu134 probably not if she thought computer science had too much math. Neuroscience isn’t necessarily easy from what I understand. It’s normal to switch majors a lot though.
@@ngkngk875 my mom switched majors 9 times. She's an English teacher now 😂 meanwhile I've switched 3 times
Oh gosh now I'm nervous I hope I can learn this because while it made sense when explained it flew right over my head when I tried to analyze it myself.
"Calculus comes very rarely" Not so sure about that.
I'm a CS major and so far I've gone through 4 semesters of Calculus, that's 2 years of learning new ways to solve differential equations.
Then had 2 semesters of fourier analysis, granted some of it was applied to signals and systems.
Also went through probability and statistics to then learn about stochastic processes, which again is basically calculus, as well as optimisation (which, again, is a mix of calculus and linear algebra) for machine learning.
And in the following semesters, I'll have to take classes in signal processing which again, is nothing but calculus for the most part.
CS is just Math, not Math for its own sake like Math majors do, but Math needed by the industry.
People who were looking forward to code 24/7 are the ones who struggle now, also CS students are not that good at programming for the most part, I mean we're obviously better than every other majors in the purely scientific field, but it's definitely not what we excel at: we're better at problem solving involving logic, information, data structures, graphs, and other kinds of discrete objects, but the coding part of it will most likely be left as an exercise to the technicians you will be working with, who probably know how to code better than you.
How hard is it to do more than 1 major? (I am just in my last school year and am close to doing my final school exams before graduating from my school and was curious about what I could do after school and wondered about the possibility of studying more than one thing if possible so that's why I am asking. And of course, you can just choose to not respond)
For those who would like to know how much math classes you have to take, I sum my case up here. (Well it got longer than I expected.)
So in the first four semester you have about 50% mathrelated classes. We need to take Discrete Mathematics, Linear Algebra for CS, Analysis for CS, Mathematical Logic with are mostly pure mathematic, and there are classes that are theoretical and are mathematical too but a bit different: computability and complexity, formal systems and automation but there are also interesting classes, if you are not that much into math, like programming, computer engineering, which was mostly like an introduction to electrical engineering, operating system and systemsoftware, mostly about scheduling but we learned a bit C and bash, databases and information systems, software engineering and we had a lab where we wrote our own OS.
Well, this is my case here in Aachen, Germany, where it gives you a good basis in the beginning of the Bachelor and later you can choose on what you want to specify on. I can't tell you much about what happens later as I only started studying two years ago.
I have to tell you it is not easy and a whole another dimension than high school, but if you learn enough, I mean learn for real, not just two hours a day after the lectures, you can make it. But I guess how difficult it is, is really different depending on the country and city, so I can't tell how hard it is somewhere else. Atleast here you won't get much holidays, haha. But I hope it gets paid off later and studying could be enjoying too, if you are getting used to it after a while. But I guess in the beginning most people will be shocked of the maths, good luck.
can we get an update :)
how are things right now?
Thanks
@@ad-zx4iv good question😂😂
you are in Aachen? May I ask which university you study in?
So, has your head blown off yet?
you gave me all the info i needed to do a powerpoint presentation, thank you
This was gold bro, you produce quality content, keep up the good work
So true
This is a decent introduction to the theoretical foundations of computer science. Two other fundamental topics are programming languages/compilers, and operating systems. Every CS major will take some classes on those topics.
He's also missing Automata Theory.
Networking, DBMS, and few other subjects as well
Your videos may just be the best I've come across on the subject at hand. I am in my last year of studying Computer Science in college, but I've developed an interest in Electrical and Computer Engineering after watching many Marvel movies and taking a Computer Architecture course. I've gleaned some useful information. Thank you!
Thank you for the comment!
this is really interesting! I've always liked math, and was always interested on how computers actually worked.
maybe computer engineering?
@@adamprovost6745 Some physics too and therapy.
You are All-rounder. It's very helpful.
Thank you so much for these vids!! You've really helped me see what I can expect if I do apply for Comp Sci
I got to be honest. I was terrible at math in high school. Could barely pass each grade. I am 5 years out of high school and I have been feeling the urge to take up something like computer science. I am worried that I might still not be very good at math although I have learned a lot about myself since high school and one thing I have learned is that I can do anything I set my mind too.
Sir you're scaring me with all this math
Im a computer science student and we have to take Calculus courses and also Linear algebra and Number theory and Group theory as well , so we basicly study all major Math courses
Yes firstly study mathematics
The calculus isn't for apply it in computer science, you need calculus to understand background theory like Machine Learning, Kernel, etc.
You missed a few math courses, we, computer scientists have to take. We take Statistics and Probability I and II, Statistical Computing, Operations Research, Numerical Analysis, Linear Algebra, Calculus I and II, Set Theory, Mathematical Logic, Discreate Math (which was talked about), some students take Game Theory. At least those are the ones I had to take as a Computer Science major. Plus all the classes related to software and hardware.
Zach can you do a video about certain topics or related fields you need to know to be an algorithm developer. I've been looking on the internet and can't find anything that goes in depth of what you need to know.
we need a part 3
JESUS CHRIST!!!! Part 1 gave hope to go for CS but Part 2 took it ALL away
@@YoshizawaABC1180 yupp🤣and I'm already dying doing something else but it's all good 🏳️
@@Radar1onee what are doing instead? 😀
@@olau5478 I'm studying architecture now😁
I'd love everything in this vid but my heart says engineering is your destiny so...
@@retardbuster1498 Your destiny says calculus 1 2 and 3
Here for my future
You left Computer Networks and Operating systems which also use a lot of discrete math like graph theory
best video explaining computer science great work
this is great! thank you very much
Thanks for the comment!
Wow! This was a really nice review of my discrete math class :)
Okay now THIS is cool math
Fail, 39 is not prime. 37+5.
lol yeah didn't catch that until after uploading...
Every even* integer greater than 2 will be the sum of prime nos , here 39 is not a even integer.
@@suryamanisudhakar5743 The number in question is 42. The problem with 39 is, that it's not prime. That was the requirement.
4:48 39 is not a prime number. You write 39+3, maybe you meant 37+5?
Super video! I applauded for £50.00 👏👏👏👏
I am still at high school and I LOVE MATH but I am thinking about getting a major in math and a major on one of the following subjects: mechanical engineering or computer science (informatics) . What should I choose; which of the two uses more math; (math is my favourite subject, however it is not the only subject I like .I also like physics and computer science and some programming that I do on my own)
Thank you!
ty
Hey, great video! Could you also make a video on nanotechnology engineering please and thanks?
thank u so much, this video helped :)
A little glimpse of what else is there in CS except this ? This is about the 2nd year of CS what about the 3rd year ? A reply would really help :)
3rd year is usually when you start branching off into specializations, such as software engineering (programming focus) , artificial intelligence (machine learning, etc), computer systems (hardware, assembly programming) , databases , theoretical computer science (more proofs and math) , etc.
Love the videos
This video was really helpful..thank you 😁👌
Glad he didn't go into graphics, and how to write software make computer draw pictures and images that look so real, that in itself is another major field.
Very useful
Funny, I actually learned that the reason they have you take calculus is to test your critical thinking abilities. Minimal of what you actually learn in calculus comes up past your third or fourth semester.
I think it's to maintain the fiction that computer science is a "science." It isn't. It's a highly specialized trade. Science studies the universe. Computer science invents more ways to make transistors do fancy tricks and then applies those tricks to life.
Can you do one on computer engineering careers or in that in the computer science careers video?
+Caleb Benefield yes it's actually coming out in a few weeks!
great video, really interesting stuff :)
Why do we always have to find the most efficient way? Is it that important or different even if the program doess the same but slower.
@Physic58 Is that related to time complexity?
4:51 39 is not a prime number, is it? Wouldn't it be such as 42=37+5?
I really hate maths but for some reason I enjoy my Algorithms class, it can be a bit complicated for me at times, but its not all that bad. Although I really dislike my foundation maths for computing class, god--- I failed my mid-term, and that really threw me off and I started thinking if CS was really for me...
what classes teach algorithms?
2:19
3 yellow + 3 gray = $34, 15kg
36$
I found the money:weight ratio of each box and used the greedy algorithm on that.
great video and very informative :)
I latterly don't know what he's talking about but thank you 🖒
i'm taking computer science in college
Ankit Mehra teach me computer science please 😢
good luck!
Its ben 2 years tell me about it
Started my BSc in September :)
@@60secnews27 Offcourse
Thank you so much 🙏🏻❤️❤️❤️ you really helped me
Anyone that knows for sure please answer this question. If I major in “electrical engineering and computer science” will I be learning a little bit of each or will I learn as much as an ee major and a cs major combined?
am really sad that I couldn't study CS and am already 25 now...am I too late for a career in CS if I am to again take 4 years learning CS? I love the math behind CS, I love the science behind CS, I love cryptography, I love the most things about CS...so far I learned web development by myself online, but I still feel I should have gone to UNI and took CS, it just kinda feels too late....web development is not that mesmerizing
I think it's not late.
Never too late to learn. Also, 25 is very young, relax you have plenty of time...just start!
We always think it’s too late. It’s a bad habit we humans tend to do. At 12 years old I was telling myself it was too late to learn an instrument. Just go for it. I’m 21 now.
Please upload more content related cs and ce
Does highschool students get this? For me, a little. I must work hard because I want this course but I'm bad at math. Well, I need to learn math from now on along with CS.
i wanna choose computer science. in bcc and then make a transfer to one of 4 years. some recommendations?
If you study formal logic or logic and critical thinking or discrete math/structures. You should be fine.
Pressed to the core, time to move to deathbody program.
Hi, Thanks for your useful videos. My BSC degree is Mechanical Engineering , if
i change my major and study computer science in Masters degree, do you think the consequence is good or not ?
That would be a great combination! Good Luck
what is a computer science and mathematics major
Watching this video I am like what the value of the nickle
Im interested in circuits, micro-controllers,robotics, programming, n math. I don't know which engineering major to join, can anyone give me some advice please??
mechanical engineering with a mechatronics sub focus, he has a video about Mechanical Engineering (i think) "mechanical engineering vs electrical engineering" that explains it
Lacnevorp what about an undergrad in mechatronics, alot of universities are now offering that.
if you want to solely focus on mechatronics go for it up to you when it boils down
and where is video about software engineering and I.T ?
plz do videos about these filed to
logic in numbers is painful, so much easier just to use words to understand things, how do i get comfortable with using logic in numbers, is it just practise?
Ignore the last advice
If you just want to build apps website don't go into computer science
Building websites apps are not difficult, even high school students can learn it
Its a waste of money to do computer science if your goal is to make sites, apps
There are bootcamps for it
Even if you want to be software engineer you can be one without computer science degree. 80% of what computer science degrees teach you will never be used in software jobs
Computer science degrees are meant to give you basics to later go and do research in various things like Algorithms (which is basically Math research), Artificial Intelligence, Compiler, Graphics etc. All of these requires insane amount of maths and you'll be using programming only as a tool
So don't take computer science if you don't wanna be a computer scientists
Also one more stuff this guy said wrong is computer scientists focus on softwares (wrong). Computer scientists are researchers in Computer science like AI researchers ( who will have PhDs) just like phyiscs majors aren't called Physicists (a phd is needed), you need PhD and research to be called one
So don't go into CS unless u wannabe a researcher. Software Engineering has low barrier to enter and you can do it by self learning
Lot of Software Engineers are from math, physics or other engineering majors
Wait so the career goal for cs is just to code websites or apps?? Can someone tell me if that's true. You seem to be biased towards EE and ME
Basic kotoran yg mereka perlakukan, basic motorik mereka menuju kematiannya..
1:35 made a lot of CENTS to you haha
But that one is not so obvious
Goldbach's Conjecture has already been proven
I think what you're referring to is Goldbach's weak conjecture. The strong conjecture has not been proven yet.
This video made me feel so stupid. I should probably start looking at other majors.
Thanks for the encouragement! I fear that there is so many competitors that I may be squeezed among the competitors
Hey - you aren't expected to know what you'd learn before you learn it!! You are not stupid!! :)
kristendo
nice say. wow
I know I'm late, but I barely knew this stuff either- but I just discovered this video and I'm one semester done with my major, so now I know about some of the stuff he talked about, but we still haven't touched Euclid's Algorithm, or Knapsack.
@@TheSuperqami u guys know that the factorisation trick he taught in the last vid was tought to us in class 10 here in India
Man plz kindly use some global refrence so we could also get.
Everyone doesn't live US.
But 6 is not sum of any two prime numbers
6.30
1:37 the greedy alg probably made a lot of *cents* to you loooool
Masih ada kaki dibawah Jing..
yeah this is literally maths
5:30 doesn’t really make sense even if computers could detect infinite loops. Computers have a finite limit on the numbers that they can operate on
Dude i lovee computer science but i am totally shit in maths like yeah i know 2 plus 2 is 5 but cmon dude u wont need such an easy math yeah i am searching that some one atleast some say in his video that u dont need to know much maths to do computer science but atleast they should say u will learn it during computer science like my mind is out of maths like it hangs when i think of maths lol
If you don't like math, become a programmer, not a computer scientist.
@@connormowry Bingo.
Hal yg udah usang, akan menuju kematian tuannya.
So my Caucasian boyfriend young Anthony in programming class in love with me in Jesus name 🙏
WYSI
I did bootcamp and they didn't teach me shit about programming :(
Wish i did CS.Chemical Eng sucks balls.
Those who disliked may have suffered from brain damage just for watching...😂
Well to detect an infinite loop,you'd need to wait till infinity,which is not feasible. So no it's not realistic to say anyone could detect an infinite loop because it,well,never ends.
A computer cannot detect an infinite loop, but a programmer can detect it when it the program produces a certain output that is traceable by looking at the math of your for loop.
I'm way to stupid for this stuff. Best major for stupid people?
BladeLution no one's stupid so you can take whatever you want that you have an interest in but analyze your choices first because it'll be hard if you take something not suitable with your learning skills and interests (like me, I'm more of a read, research, write kind of student but I got into a course where it isn't really needed, because execution of skills is more important which I suck at so yeah, avoid regrets)
I like to become programmer. in a same time I don't like heavy maths
like java c ++ etc is there any hope for me in this field ? plz help me
syed ataulhai yes. Math in My opinion is very minimal in programming. Like with c++, JAVA, etc. You'll be fine. You don't have to go into computer science for programming. You could go into IT or IS.
Im 11 years old...
You hardly make reference to statistics,some of your videos are statistical based courses but you instead call it maths
i have a question, it will be great if u could answer, reply me if i can ask
Go for it
some people were telling me if i want to do software engineering can do with CE, i live in India so is it same everywhere? finally what would u suggest if i wanna do software engg? ty :)
Yes that is the same in the US as well. A lot of CE's become software developers even though you'd think they would go on to do more hardware. You can take certain elective classes and apply for internships that are in the field of software engineering specifically which will help prepare you for a full time career.
tysm but when im filling my form theres a option to choose field and theres computer science CE and IT so for SE is CS best or CE?
Oh I'd say CS is better, the curriculum is nearly identical to a software engineer.
in short,don't take computer science 😂
【=◈︿◈=】
WYSI