ok, I'm being uncharitable. EEs are great with loops (but generally couldn't get pointers right even if you tripled their pay)
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Replying to @johnregehr
Technically I'm an EE. (Or would-be EE if I wouldn't have dropped out.) Most EEs I know are great with pointers. But they are really bad with memory management. Very dangerous combination.. :D
1 reply 0 retweets 14 likes -
Replying to @oe1cxw
my 100% heroes are the small fraction of CS/EE people who master (or become good enough at) the other discipline as well -- I always tell students if they can do this they're easily employed for life
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Replying to @johnregehr @oe1cxw
From my own observations, EEs bad at abstraction, CS bad at efficiency
2 replies 2 retweets 6 likes -
Replying to @JaafarTrull @johnregehr
EEs bad at abstraction (in programming) is a funny observation, because EE as a discipline is all about abstraction. (Think OpAmps, Logic Gates, etc.) But I think the observation is correct.
1 reply 0 retweets 8 likes -
Replying to @oe1cxw @JaafarTrull
"bad at some kinds of abstraction valued by CS people" seems right
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Let’s all be objective here - the one true stereotype is EEs are good at everything...
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one time some mechanical engineers enrolled in my class and after that I stopped making fun of EEs about their programming skills for a while
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Replying to @jfbastien @johnregehr and
I actually wish I had taken more Mech-E like courses like fluid dynamics and differential equations in college… instead I double majored in linguistics
2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
Now that I’m in graphics I feel like I have to spend so much time learning basic math that I really should have learned :(
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