no.
Science, especially physics; any engineering discipline; architecture; economics and finance; computer programming; statistics...
You'll most likely learn one or two programming subjects in your university studies, but not much more than that. You will certainly need much less knowledge about programming than if you specialize in computer sciences.
Highly likely an art than a science, most people get the misconception that you have to be good at math to be a good programmer, but it's not necessary. In fact, creativity will serve a programmer very well meaning that if you're great with languages and essays, then programming and coding should be easy for you. I did computer science once, and I highly regretted it because it was too much programming which required creativity which is something that I don't possess. ========== May I suggest that engineering is creatively applied science? Computer programming requires both creativity and an ability to think very logically and follow set rules. Because following those rules leans more towards engineering than art, I'd lean towards programming being more engineering than art.
The Perl Programming system is used to script language for computer tasks or programs. It can write scripts for science, finance, graphics and system administration programs.
No
No, you probably won't fail computer science. Probably. Mathematics involves logic and problem solving - which is a major part of computer science. Although programming is also a big part of computer science, there are quite a lot of branches to do with computers, and you don't necessarily have to work with programming. I'm good at maths and not so good at programming but I still did pretty well (better than all the hard-core programmers) in the computer science / programming class. If that's any consolation.
Not as much as weakness in science - no good being an expert at programming if you don't understand what it is you are trying to make the computer calculate. I'd be mroe worried about the relevance or not of economics!
Computer networking is a good subject for computer science. Here you read all about programming and coding through which your future may be dark.
Math, science and logical thinking are necessary requirements for being a good programmer. If you're good at those, you'll definitely do well in computer programming!Open in Google Docs ViewerOpen link in new tabOpen link in new windowCopy link addressEdit PDF File on PDFescape.com
That depends on the individual
It's simple really, there are people who are mathematically oriented but not science oriented
yes
Science, especially physics; any engineering discipline; architecture; economics and finance; computer programming; statistics...
If you think you can draw that kind of correlation, then I've got news for you: You're not that good at math.
Because you are writing code that tells the computer what to do. The conception that mathematics is useful to programming is a debunked myth because I know a lot of people in my computer science program before I switched to something else who are terrible with math but are very good at essay writing and programming. In summary, the reader(which in this case is a computer) has to understand the code you write to it.
You'll most likely learn one or two programming subjects in your university studies, but not much more than that. You will certainly need much less knowledge about programming than if you specialize in computer sciences.
Yes. Math is needed in every science field as well other mathematical occupations. Accountants, actuaries, and staticians are all math jobs that pay well.