On 01/21/2012 07:01 PM, Chad J wrote:
On 01/21/2012 06:35 PM, Era Scarecrow wrote:
So college wasn't all that bad to me. They still need to change the
funding model here in the states though. That shit is broken as fuck.
For some people, namely those that are talented and have good
self-motivation, it may very well be worth their while to skip that
mess. Probably doesn't work for physics though; it can be hard to do
experimental physics on your own ;)
Also, the D newsgroup is probably better at teaching
programming than college. Hmmmmm. ;)
I have refused to go to college if I can't pay for it upfront and
easily, which was impossible. Right now I have an option to go leaving
me without a debt. There's courses I want to take to get me further
into programming, yet the options are either difficult to impossible
based on location, or what I really want isn't a specific offered
course, without a lot of extra bloat to it likely.
Now I'm wondering what I should take. Should I even bother getting a
CS degree? Or does someone think another option would be better?
Well, it seems you've read my story. In my opinion, CS degrees don't
teach you anything you can't learn on your own if you enjoy programming.
I think that contributing to open source projects and learning from the
pleasures of other people's well-written code and the pains of other
people's poorly written code will teach most of the important lessons.
Maybe make a few throw-away games, just to play around, if you're into
that kind of thing.
I liked my Physics degree. A good physics degree is hard. You won't have
much spare time. Some of the homework load can be downright futile:
triage what you can. But I think it can yield dividends: a good physics
program can turn you into a badass. Make sure you enjoy physics to some
extent before you even consider this, though. I imagine a lot of the
other hard sciences may have similar implications. These also have the
advantage (?) that you can't learn them easily on your own, so you get
some leverage by doing them in college.
One more thing, before I forget:
Go to community college first. Especially if there is a decent one in
your area. This can cut costs enormously.
I made one planning mistake with this though: I should have picked my 4
year college at the same time and then talked to them about which
classes would transfer from the community college. Make sure you know
what classes in the community college map to all of the "general
education" credits in the 4-year college. If you don't do this, then
you could end up doing like me and finishing community college
almost-early, ending up in limbo for a quarter, and then still taking
general ed stuff in my 3rd year of college.