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by strictnein 3343 days ago
CS is also a sub-set of Electrical Engineering, ergo engineering.

The work that people with CS degrees do is typically far more like Engineering (designing, testing, building, and fixing systems) than Science.

1 comments

Computer Science is in no way a subset of Electrical Engineering.

I was in Computer Engineering, which is a subset of Electrical Engineering, and looked at transferring to Computer Science since I was more interested in software than hardware.

The two disciplines are enormously different and I'd basically have to do-over two years. Engineering forces everyone through the same fundamentals, you learn about physics, chemistry, and do outrageous amounts of math. In Computer Science it's a whole different track apart from the small amount of overlap in the programming courses.

At my university the Engineering Department was a separate entity from the entire school. Any engineering graduate was also on track to get their P.Eng. Computer Science students cannot get this without an engineering degree.

Depends on the school.

At MIT, Course 6 is Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. 6-3 is Computer Science and Engineering and corresponds to a classic CS degree. 6-1 is more of a classic EE degree.

Historically and in practice at many schools the CompSci program came out of the EE school. To say it's not a subset is simply wrong. You think math professors were the ones wiring up early experimental computer hardware?

Sounds like a strange computer science track at your school. And subpar, to be honest.