I’m working my way to a CS degree and am currently slogging my way through an 8-week Trig course. I barely passed College Algebra and have another Algebra and two Calculus classes ahead of me.

How much of this will I need in a programming job? And, more importantly, if I suck at Math, should I just find another career path?

  • kamstrup@programming.dev
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    3 days ago

    Being comfortable with basic back-of-the-envelope math can be a huge benefit. (Full disclosure: i am a math major who is now a programmer)

    Over my career I have several examples of projects that have saved weeks worth of dev time because someone could predict the result with some basic calculations. I also have several examples where I have shown people some basic math showing that their idea is never gonna work, they don’t listen and do it anyway, and I see them 1 month later and the project failed in the way i predicted.

    A popular (and wise) saying is that “Weeks of work can save you hours of meetings”. I think the same is true for basic math. “Weeks of coding can save you minutes of calculation”.

    You can definitely be a successful programmer career without great math skills. Math is a tool that can help you be more effective.

    • icermiga@lemmy.today
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      3 days ago

      Can you share the full story of the projects that you could predict could fail using maths?