is Engineering is maths for brainlets or it's just a fucking comme meme from mother fuckers here ??
engineering is not math. the most math you'll take is differential equation.
>>8633490
Dunno.
But the meme that engineers have terrible writing skills seems to be true.
>>8633508
man i'm sorry
you know that's little sneaky brainlet friend who just happened to wait me until i went away for a while but comm'n he's a poet :)
>>8633504
so i'm totaly brainlet
>>8633490
It's a meme that comes from jews who can't actually do anything practical, beyond inventing bullshit theoretical models which self regress and cannot be tested.
why would you have the joke in words?
>>8633533
the offical brainlet poster (OBP) here
i don't get what you are saying ?
>>8633504
engineers don't even solve differential equations, they use lookup tables instead.
>>8633548
Wrong. In UK we're taught up to PDEs
>>8633548
i'm 3rd year Undergrad ME Stu. and really was enjoying FEA, DEs, Calc I-III classes but got frustrated when Prof. just skimed over those meaty stuff taking beautiful mathematical rigorousity to death and i'm thinking about finish my ME degree then pursuing a M.S in mathematics after augmentating my maths knowledge with a typical B.S in mathematics
Engineering is for brainlets who doesn't comprehend Mathematical rigorousity
~ said the guy who is playing with your mom
are "applied mathematicians" engineers?
>>8633548
How do you use a look up table to solve a differential equation, and how is that different than "solving" one?
>>8635236
Do they build new things?
>>8633587
Honestly for engineering you need a wide array of math to be actually competent and you have little time due to other classes so they just teach you the applied side of things limited to the essential stuff. It would take a lot more math classes even for "superficial" stuff if you want to understand it from a mathematical perspective.
I'm in Europe though so maybe your engineering math classes are simply shit (at your uni).
On the other hand I quite often hear about engineers who have a second degree in applied math, it's especially common among control theory obsessed EEs, etc.
Plus, they have probably specified a bunch of recommended books. Read those. Learn to learn auto-didactically. If you want to be competent in anything (including engineering) then you will need it. You'll be learning for the next 40 years constantly without stopping.