Anyone ever took that class in college?
Im taking it now and im wondering what you guys think about it.
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Thread: Computer science
- 29 Jan. 2013 05:52am #1
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Computer science
- 29 Jan. 2013 05:53am #2
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Nope, never interested me.
Made by Use.
used to be known as the once fabled "Ethan," Slayer of Theocules, Bringer of Rain!
- 29 Jan. 2013 05:55am #3
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- 29 Jan. 2013 05:57am #4
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- 29 Jan. 2013 05:57am #5
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- 29 Jan. 2013 05:58am #6
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- 29 Jan. 2013 06:07am #7
Is it a class/subject or a course? I suppose I study CompSci at uni, but that's more my degree than an individual class.
- 29 Jan. 2013 06:07am #8
- 29 Jan. 2013 06:08am #9
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- 29 Jan. 2013 06:09am #10
- 29 Jan. 2013 06:39am #11
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- 29 Jan. 2013 06:43am #12
- 29 Jan. 2013 06:45am #13
- 29 Jan. 2013 10:08am #14
I'm in college now for a computer science degree. One I got all the pre-requisites out the way it's great.
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- 29 Jan. 2013 10:15am #15
I'm thinking about going back to a school , thinking about a trade school , becoming a painter or something with physical labor .
- 29 Jan. 2013 10:43am #16
Comp sci.
i love those classes.
i hate doing my GE's though ;-;
- 29 Jan. 2013 01:15pm #17
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That's what I'm considering as my college course, but I haven't heard of it being just a class
I am steady killin' fools.
- 29 Jan. 2013 01:51pm #18
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Took Comp Sci I, horrible teacher, didn't learn anything. 0/10 would not take again. He had us using Alice and Greenfoot (Two horribly shitty programs written in Java) more than he had us doing legitimate programming. It fucking sucked.
I'm planning on majoring in Computer Science though, because then if comp sec jobs ever kind of fall though, I can always do programming or something.
- 29 Jan. 2013 04:31pm #19
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- 29 Jan. 2013 04:53pm #20
I learned NOTHING. So far all they've tried to teach is "This is a video card" and other painfully obvious facts. It's not until around the second half of your education that you actually learn worth while things. But I'm enjoying the fact that I don't have to pay attention or even show up to class to make an A.
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- 29 Jan. 2013 05:36pm #21
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- 29 Jan. 2013 05:38pm #22
In that case your university actually has a real computer science course. My school offers a pitiful computer science program. Which is why I'll be transferring to Plymouth University next year.
Edit: Here are some screenshots from an actual test. Seriously, this is the easiest class ever.
Last edited by Elliot; 29 Jan. 2013 at 05:41pm.
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- 29 Jan. 2013 05:46pm #23
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- 29 Jan. 2013 06:14pm #24
lol.
My Comp Sci class was actually just C++ and an introduction to memory. The freshman classes are always designed such that someone who has never even used a computer could learn from them, since many college students are adults going back to school again, so you can't assume the student grew up with or has even used a computer before.
- 29 Jan. 2013 07:52pm #25
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Lol, my comp sci class said C and C++ and stuff are too old. That actually kind of pissed me off, if you get kids thinking that Java will get them a job, you're heartless.
- 29 Jan. 2013 08:18pm #26
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- 29 Jan. 2013 11:17pm #27
- 30 Jan. 2013 12:11am #28
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- 30 Jan. 2013 12:45am #29
- 03 Feb. 2013 03:11am #30
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This is the program I'm currently taking in college Computer Programmer Analyst Program (T127)
As far as the programming in it, it mainly focuses on C# and Java.
- 03 Feb. 2013 05:20am #31
MY Compsci I Experience:
5/10 Scratch
3/10 Jeroos
1/10 Gridworld
1/10 JCreator
- 03 Feb. 2013 06:41am #32
- 03 Feb. 2013 07:21am #33
Java is a cross-platform language. The code you use in a Windows machine will work equivalently in a Linux machine (with some exceptions of course). On the contrary, C++ is not cross-platform.
Also, Java is a very easy to understand language for beginners. There are no pointers (often confuses newbies) and object oriented design is part of the language.
I am a currently in the second semester of my senior year (4th year) in the Computer Engineering program at my University. From my experience, the two main differences between Comp Sci. and Comp Eng. are that one focuses in applications of programming and hardware (Comp Eng.), and the other one focuses in programming and the math behind it (Comp Sci.). While you get programming in both fields, Comp Eng. will give you a background on how computers work from the very foundations of them (transistors).
The class you are going to take is possibly an introductory class. Every educational institution handles their majors differently. For me, my introductory class was a problem solving class. We literally solved puzzles with math for a whole semester... and it was awesome. The second semester, it was an introduction to C. I'm not too familiar with whatever was taught since I opted out of the class (since I knew the material).
- 03 Feb. 2013 07:59am #34
Java is cross-platform because of the Virtual Machine (JVM). Due to this, the same code would run on different machines without extensive modifications.
This however doesn't mean C++ isn't cross-platform. C++ will produce binaries native to the system you're using. Therefore you would only have to compile the same code on a different platform and of course tailor/shoehorn it to run on the system in question. It shouldn't pose any serious problems if you aren't using any native OS libraries (i.e. WinAPI for Windows).
I think that's what you more or less mean, but I'm just clarifying just in case.
- 03 Feb. 2013 03:31pm #35
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- 03 Feb. 2013 04:38pm #36
Yup, that's what I meant. In C/C++ you need to go out of your way to make sure everything is compatible in whatever platforms you're using. A good example is network programming. In Windows there is an API for Windows sockets that you're required to use, for Linux it is a different library.
I'm sure there are tools to visually create GUIs in C++, like in Java... if that is what you meant.
- 03 Feb. 2013 06:13pm #37
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Nah, I was talking about how Java has built-in libraries for GUIs and 2D graphics and stuff like that.
Hey, question: Didn't you make an autoposter a while ago? I still have the .exe of it, it has a beautiful splash screen and stuff, but is now broken because of the new login. You should try updating it, it was awesome. Beeped and popped up whenever it ran into a captcha and stuff, it was wonderful. Also, you should use that splash on any new bots you make, haha.
- 04 Feb. 2013 05:16pm #38
- 12 Feb. 2013 07:37am #39
My first comp sci class was an introduction to C++ programming. Fairly easy. Since then i've done a semester in C, Java, two semesters in C++, and currently I'm in data structures. I've learned quite a bit, but I feel that i still don't know enough to really do anything productive with it, that's why i'm gonna study other languages on the side so I can contribute to LG with bots. :/ Now I just need a starting point haha.