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Having "Mathematics for Computer Science" as a course title rubs me the wrong way, I always believed Computer Science was a specialized subfield of Mathematics.


In principle. But in practice, the industry doesn't need nearly as many mathematicians as it does software engineers, and almost no one is getting into CS out of the love of math. CS coursework reflects that. Here are some important algorithms and data structures, here's how you write Python, good luck at big tech!


My CS program (at Purdue) was from the math department. We didn't even start designing real programs until the 4th semester (and that was in Forth or C).

At that time, if you wanted to do application programming, you took software engineering (OO Pascal and C++) or computer technology (Java) from either tech or engineering schools.


You could make an analogous course titled "Mathematics for [subfield of mathematics]" for any subfield of math. It would be a good(ish) title (I have never titled a course), and the content would be nicely focused.

Such courses are generally titled "Intro to".




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