are dual degrees a meme /sci/?
Ye
>>8514426
Lrn2meme, trollfag pls
>>8514426
No, you get 2 degrees for the price of 1.
I'm doing one now and i'd say definitely.
I feel like i'm wasting my time but the only upside is that I'm not entirely set on which career path I want to follow considering that they are both very closely related.
Double degrees definitely go into the same level of detail in terms of your major but only for your specialisations and for the final years so it's not as if you're any different from a single major.
>people will try and convince you that getting a bachelors in Physics is better than a dual major in Maths/Physics
>>8514440
Maths/physics or maths/CS is a good idea imo.
As long as the total duration is only 4 years it's seems worth it.
My double degree is going to be 6 years though so I kind of want to kill myself before I have to face the consequences of my choices.
>>8514442
Taking undergrad CS classes is never a good idea. You may as well be burning your money and life away.
>>8514426
One degree is hard enough.
Better ace one and go to a top grad school.
>>8514452
>implying you can't ace 2
>>8514426
Focus on getting really good at something. The ones who matter in our world make sure to know what you can or can't do any way.
Depends on the field/degree combo. Generally the rule is that degrees let alone double degrees are not a smart idea.
>>8514451
Operating systems, networks, algorithms and data structures (also beyond just an intro class, though most of those may be grad courses), compilers, AI (not ML, as that is usually a watered-down stats class), databases (not an SQL course unless your uni is shit), parallel/distributed, security (crypto classes should be taken from the math department though), and paradigms are good undergrad classes unless you go to a shit uni (which is most in the US from what I have heard, unlike Europe).
Anything software engineering (agile, testing, meme patterns, Java...) is a total meme though.
>>8514426
Yes, you can only have 1 job after you graduate and there is no reason you can't learn another subject on your own time. You end up using less than 10% of the stuff you learn in school in the real world anyways.