Tfw you realize 95% of computer science is linear algebra and trigonometry

>tfw you realize 95% of computer science is linear algebra and trigonometry

Attached: awesome-laughing-meme-face-meme-faces-happy-crying-image-memes-at-relatably-laughing-meme-face.jpg (390x310, 30K)

>tfw you realize the dropout rate is so high because 90% of people are "in it for the money" and don't know anything about computers
Second year and I'm still taking it easier than highschool. Does it get hard when there's 10 people left by the final year?

Attached: 1545850420996.jpg (700x1000, 68K)

Aren't you meant to learn that in highschool?

Attached: 12242423788489.jpg (330x330, 25K)

when you realize that programming jobs don't require anything you learned in computer science

Attached: 1551045965791.png (662x594, 106K)

How small is your Uni?

>computer science
>trigonometry

Ah, I remember those times when I took the sinus of a recursive grammar

NAME THAT GOURD

Attached: 1550014865249.jpg (3264x1836, 1.36M)

14,000
CS course has 100 in first year and splits into 3 separate programs in 2nd year. Majority drop out first year.

I go to a school of about 40,000 undergrads and you can't get enough people to leave. For some reason they tough it out, even if they have to cheat.
This produces a bunch of brainlets that do nothing but complain about C and segfaults for the next 4 years. I wish profs didn't encourage this type of behavior, but they still the OO meme pretty hard so what can they expect.

No idea what I'd use linear algebra for, there's a month left in my course

duh

Attached: typical cs degree.png (574x839, 55K)

>he doesn't know how jpegs work
kek

that is hardly 95% of computer science. Also the DTC has hardly anything to do with trigonometry except for the mathematical foundation

You're just lucky that you were circumcized when u were born and turned into an autist.

CS is not about computers

I find my CS classes to be far, far more challenging than my math classes desu.

The upper division courses stop being about programming and go more into the conceptual. If you can get past that and your senior project you're golden.
After all of that you'll get your first real job where you realize nothing you learned in college is actually useful and you should have spent more of that free time programming. 5 years into my career and I'd say about 5% of what I know is from college. The rest was picked up on the job reading documentation to complete some task in a crazy time limit. Thanks consulting.

Attached: 1513279807732.jpg (1024x872, 113K)

>OO is a meme
How do you figure?

we do computer organisation and programming languages alongside cs theory and maths, I think the first two have very much to do with computers

Not that OO is bad, but they instill the mindset:
OO GOOD
PROCEDURAL BAD

Attached: oogaboogaaa.jpg (800x450, 41K)

Wait till you figure out academics are the literal worst, preaching decades old ideas not relevent to real world business. Keep hacking away at polymorphic code you never reuse ill keep all the jobs and pussy warm while u suffer.

>not discrete structures
OP uneducated retard confirmed

I swore that shit off once i saw a grey beards "drive mapping vb script" 10 file 800 line visual studio project. FP 4 life.

There are jobs everywhere in every language. Just pick what you like and learn the fundamentals. Eventually you'll be good enough to pick up anything with little trouble in between.
t. Full stack .NET developer
The real trick is to do consulting as your first job. Tight client budgets will keep you on your feet and doing different client work will keep you touching new technology. Don't work internal software until you're confident in your abilities.