If you want a degree, hell no. I had to take a senior level applied probability class and linear algebra class that you won't make it through if you're not at least good at math.
And, anyone saying you don't need math in CS is full of shyt. CS is nothing but applied math. You may not take all the engineering physics and sophomore level calc classes, but CS is basically all math.
CS math ain't shyt dog lol linear algebra is the highest you'll go

I suck at math no matter what. I took algebra 1 in 8th grade and barely passed. Geometry in 9th and Algebra 2 in 10th. I had to repeat it in summer school. I was transferred out of Probability and Statistics because I just couldn't grasp it and I failed Discrete Math with an F. I think too logically. I always need to know the why and how. STEM aint for everybody
"Carry the one to the other side"
"why"
I hated discrete math largely because of my professor who gave us pop quizzes every class...even the classes after the exams...thank god it was a 200 level class in the CS curriculum and as long as I didn't fail it would count. If it was a 300 or 400 level class or if I was a math major it would be a different situation

Physics, Physics, 2, Discrete Mathematics, Discrete Mathematics 2, and statistics.
I fukking hated math![]()

"Carry the one to the other side"
"why"
Programming is not really math it's logic reasoning. But when you actually go into the analysis of algorithms and run times then it will be a nightmare because that truly is nothing but math. Computer Information Systems you can get by with no math but Computer Science I don't see how you would avoid math.
Well I never disagreed with that, i'm just saying that if your goal is a CS degree, you gotta deal with the testing bullshyt. Some people simply aren't cut out for that.
However if you want to become a Dev, fukk CS its not that crucial.
Vanderbilt didn't do jack shyt to make him a good programmer. He was a good programmer before he stepped onto that campus.
Not to shyt on Vandy, but I took an Assembly Code class at UTD one summer that was conceptually lightyears ahead of anything I learned at Vandy.
Granted I was a CE major but still.
Going back to what @Elle Driver said, and this is something I've said multiple times on this board, I feel that if you want to get into programming... CS and CE is not the way to do it.
It would be like wanting to learn Spanish and someone telling you the only way was to Major in Spanish in college
Or wanting to learn how to play an instrument and someone saying the only way to learn was to go to a music college like Berkeley
I dont want to get on my anti-college soapbox, but undergrad is utter bullshyt. If i had to do it again I would have gone to a community college, xfered to state school, and avoided over 100k in debt. Fukk private colleges![]()
A few years ago, I probably would've agreed with you as far as the necessity of a CS degree for finding a software dev job. But in the past year or so, it's gotten more difficult to get the kind of entry level developer jobs a self-taught programmer would be looking into.
Don't get me wrong, I agree that you can learn to program on your own without getting a CS degree. But in terms of landing a job, more and more places won't consider you without that specific piece of paper. I wouldn't say it's absolutely necessary, but if you have the option of getting a CS degree, it'll make getting that first job a lot easier.
Then again, location's probably plays a role as well. NYC is apparently a pretty bad market for entry-level software development jobs.
If you major in COmputer Science outside of the Engineering school, I think they'll let you get that degree without many math courses. I feel like Linear Algebra is mainly useful for people getting into graphics anyway. I may be wrong about that though, as I've never taken linear algebra.
You should probably understand set theory though. Thats basically what SQL queries are.
I'm also thinking about Comp Sci. Tired of shytty jobs with no skills. I'm doing precalc on Khan Academy right now and I'm the guy who the high school system pushed through with barely passing math grades. Math honestly scares the shyt out of me. You need to study your ass off, starting right now. I've realized that running away from math is going to keep me from those high paying "go fukk yourself" jobs I've always dreamed of. The question is how bad do you want it.
EDIT: I also want to pass the classes (forget the degree) find that blonde white bytch and shove my math grades down her throat.![]()

