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Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 15
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Hello, currently I'm enrolling in college and I'm undeclared. I read up a few posts on these forums to take a look into them but I figured I would post myself to get feedback.
My main goals are as follows:
- Have enough programming language knowledge to do the following:
-- Web Programming (Web Development using PHP, ASP, .NET, etc)
-- Software Programming (Video Games using Direct3D, OpenGL, C++, etc. Also regular application programming
As well as have abilities in Flash, Photoshop (Although this is more of a natural talent then something that can be taught).
I live in Southern California, in the LA/Hollywood area, and I would love to make a minimum of 95,000$ a year anything more then that would be great.
So my questions are, what major should I Major in in order to get to these goals? I was thinking Computer Science but from what I saw on here people say it's not the best for programming languages. Software Engineering is a possibility as well but what are your opinions?
Also, from those of you replying to this thread, if you could give me your location, degree in what major and how much money you make yearly that would also help my decision as well. I know that money shouldn't influence what I do, but I love programming so whatever makes the most money in programming would be my dream job.
My main goals are as follows:
- Have enough programming language knowledge to do the following:
-- Web Programming (Web Development using PHP, ASP, .NET, etc)
-- Software Programming (Video Games using Direct3D, OpenGL, C++, etc. Also regular application programming
As well as have abilities in Flash, Photoshop (Although this is more of a natural talent then something that can be taught).
I live in Southern California, in the LA/Hollywood area, and I would love to make a minimum of 95,000$ a year anything more then that would be great.
So my questions are, what major should I Major in in order to get to these goals? I was thinking Computer Science but from what I saw on here people say it's not the best for programming languages. Software Engineering is a possibility as well but what are your opinions?
Also, from those of you replying to this thread, if you could give me your location, degree in what major and how much money you make yearly that would also help my decision as well. I know that money shouldn't influence what I do, but I love programming so whatever makes the most money in programming would be my dream job.
Computer science is probably your best bet for a major that a lot of employers are familiar with and will help with further education. If your school has an undergraduate software engineering major then that will probably focus more on the implementation side rather than the theory of CS, but software engineering usually results in an associate's degree rather than a bachelor's, which is a minimum for most companies to hire a developer.
>if you could give me your location, degree in what major and how much money you make yearly
I live in Atlanta, Georgia. My only schooling in programming is an associate's from a local community college, and while I won't give you hard numbers, I make more than your minimum.
>if you could give me your location, degree in what major and how much money you make yearly
I live in Atlanta, Georgia. My only schooling in programming is an associate's from a local community college, and while I won't give you hard numbers, I make more than your minimum.
I'm here to prove you wrong.
>should I go into software engineering or computer science?
What courses does your school offer, because most of the time the closest you'll get to a software engineering course is CS. Everything else typically focuses more on electrical engineering, business, and management.
What courses does your school offer, because most of the time the closest you'll get to a software engineering course is CS. Everything else typically focuses more on electrical engineering, business, and management.
I'm here to prove you wrong.
They're right; it's a lot of theory. You should still study computer science for what you want. (I don't know whether this recommendation comes from my honest assessment of your situation or my desire to sic theoretical classes onto unsuspecting victims.)
These won't be taught except maybe in some specialty course. You should be able to learn these on your own, anyway. (PHP is a crappification of C++, and ASP and .NET use some programming languages that are similar to ones you'll probably be using in getting a CompSci degree.)
Once I hear 'video games', even though I doubt that's what you'll be doing when you graduate, I have to say go into Computer Science.
I think the most important thing, though, is not your degree, but how hard you work and how smart you make yourself.
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-- Web Programming (Web Development using PHP, ASP, .NET, etc)
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-- Software Programming (Video Games using Direct3D, OpenGL, C++, etc. Also regular application programming
I think the most important thing, though, is not your degree, but how hard you work and how smart you make yourself.
All my posts may be redistributed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
>will I be able to learn everything I need to know about computer
>programming in terms of web development and software
>development with a computer science degree?
Bwahahahahahahaha! No course will teach you everything you need to know. Everyone I've worked with who has a degree says that they use only a small fraction of what they learned, and the majority of what matters to them they learned on their own. If you're expecting the classes to teach you everything you need then you might not have the right mindset to be a successful developer. A degree is usually nothing more than a piece of paper to get you your first job.
That said, CS will open your eyes to a lot of things that you may not have considered. Those perspectives might make you a better problem solver in the real world.
>programming in terms of web development and software
>development with a computer science degree?
Bwahahahahahahaha! No course will teach you everything you need to know. Everyone I've worked with who has a degree says that they use only a small fraction of what they learned, and the majority of what matters to them they learned on their own. If you're expecting the classes to teach you everything you need then you might not have the right mindset to be a successful developer. A degree is usually nothing more than a piece of paper to get you your first job.
That said, CS will open your eyes to a lot of things that you may not have considered. Those perspectives might make you a better problem solver in the real world.
I'm here to prove you wrong.
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 14
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Hey, I am very interested in this topic.
I am still in high school, but I really like math, science, and computers.
When you said that most people learn things outside of class, what do you mean? I learn many random info but always wanted a class to give me knowledge. can you explain it to me, thx.
also, computers are no longer the newest technology in this world. will CS let you see other aspects of science as well? or is it limited?
I am still in high school, but I really like math, science, and computers.
When you said that most people learn things outside of class, what do you mean? I learn many random info but always wanted a class to give me knowledge. can you explain it to me, thx.
also, computers are no longer the newest technology in this world. will CS let you see other aspects of science as well? or is it limited?
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