That’s because I wanted to see what their programmers study and computer science was the closest I found. I assume that their programmers would study that? And that it’s better than study software engineering in a significantly worse university?
It really depends on what field you’re going into and what specifically the employers you’ll be courting will be looking for. For example, having a degree in philosophy was a major boost at my current job, because there are (oddly) so many CS majors out there with no critical thinking skills.
I was going to give various detailed advice here, but I realized I have no idea what the tech jobs are like in the UK. I assume they involve a lot of paperwork.
It looks like you’re talking about software engineering, but looking at computer science courses.
No, they teach mathematics because it is necessary for computer science. They probably have little care for what is useful to software engineers.
That’s because I wanted to see what their programmers study and computer science was the closest I found. I assume that their programmers would study that? And that it’s better than study software engineering in a significantly worse university?
It really depends on what field you’re going into and what specifically the employers you’ll be courting will be looking for. For example, having a degree in philosophy was a major boost at my current job, because there are (oddly) so many CS majors out there with no critical thinking skills.
I was going to give various detailed advice here, but I realized I have no idea what the tech jobs are like in the UK. I assume they involve a lot of paperwork.