Should I study computer science or electronic engineering?
Mechanical Engineering, bro.
Do whatever you like. Keep in mind though, that you really can't know if you've made the right decision untill you're actually doing some study.
Well, if either of your parents has a degree in either of those fields, go with that one undoubtedly. Otherwise rely upon the classes you've taken in those general areas and which job is more appealing to you a decade down the road, concerning both pay and the actual enjoyment of your work. Depending on how new you are to college, keep in mind you can change your major, but whatever you do, don't do it past the first year. Good luck, anon
>>17756470
Top keke
>>17756465
EE student here, do EE.
EE if you live (or want to move in) USA, Canada, Australia or Western Europe. CS if you live anywhere else.
>>17756736
What? I'm brazilian hue hue and EE is better. Well there is always the meme
>coders mak 100249015021950192051205901259$ initially
but that is meem
>>17756751
really? I wouldn't have guessed. Maybe no one outsources workforce in IT there for some reason or the taxing system doesn't encourage it. In Eastern Europe codemonkeys win 1.5x as much as freshly graduated EEs and the differences only gets wider with experience. There's also the possibility of working online from home for pretty good money compared to the wages in this area.
>>17756782
I went into EE because it's a broader field than CS and I can work with physical things AND learn to code. At least here in brazil the math and physics part are quite heavy. It's a very broad field you can do ANYTHING you want.
The software industry is doing between then hardware (ie. heading upwards not downwards). You can do whatever you want though, if you're serious about it.
Any good CS course will have an embedded programming option which will allow you to program circuits. That makes projects like programming light displays and 3D printers possible. You can of course check that in the spec.