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You don't need computer programming for physics. Try it out; you might like it.


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12y ago

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Related Questions

Does being good at math but not biology and programming help you with physics chemistry and engineering?

Yes, math is more closely applicable to physics, chemistry, and engineering, than biology and programming are.


Do you suck at physics chemistry and engineering if you are good at math but bad at computer programming?

Not necessarily.


Do you suck at physics and chemistry and engineering if you are good at math but bad at programming?

Such a correlation is absurd.


Is it true that if you're good at math but bad at programming you will fail physics chemistry and engineering?

no


Does being good at math but weak at computer programming hinder you from physics chemistry and engineering?

yes


Do you suck at physics chemistry as well as engineering if you are good at math but bad at programming?

No, all the others are much more math-related than programming.


Is it possible for you to be good at science and engineering if you are good at math and economics but not biology and programming?

Not so sure about economics but you will need physics.


Do you suck at physics and engineering if you are good at math but bad at chemistry and programming?

No. You do not suck. You can truly . . . whatever the opposite is.


Do you suck at physics and engineering if you are good at math but bad at chemistry computer science and programming?

That depends on the individual


Will you do badly in physics chemistry and engineering if you are good at math but bad at programming?

Physics and engineering in college are almost all math, so you should have no problem there. You may be bad at programming a computer, but perhaps you are not so bad at being a user. For example in electronic or mechanical engineering you will use very sophisticated CAD and math software, but as a user; not really programming as a software engineer does. But I would say not to give up yet on programming. Everyone goes through what I call the "sweaty armpits" stage of programming, but after that most people (especially people who like math) really take to programming.


Will you have a hard time with physics chemistry engineering if you are good at math and economics but not programming?

I suppose that is possible to have success with minimal efforts in programming (of course, don't be completely stranger).


Why are people who are good at languages good at programming?

This is not necessarily true. It depends on how good you are a programming rather then speaking languages. It may be that people who come from different countries speak the language of where they come from and decide to do programming as their job.