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by nonameiguess
608 days ago
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Not all that interested in debate, either, but it's hard to tell what you're really claiming here. It isn't the case with departments I'm aware of, certainly not where I went to school myself, that someone can graduate with a CS degree having taken nothing but theory courses. Tenured researchers can eventually specialize in that, but even PhD candidates have to demonstrate broad mastery of the entire core of CS across multiple sub-disciplines. Perhaps you're talking about the split between Electrical Engineering and Computer Science? That one isn't universal as some departments only offer EECS and not CS as a major, but when CS on its own is offered, "hardware" courses tend to be about microarchitecture, with practical work done using simulators. You're not required to know much of anything about electronics. But there is no program I'm aware of where a person can do nothing but math and get a CS degree. You have to write and test code. |
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