nothing and everything
engineering, chemistry, mathematics
You HAVE to be good at mathematics to be good at chemistry, physics and engineering. It's not a handicap, it's a necessity.
Yes.
For Physics and Engineering yes, but not so much for Chemistry.
No, it is not true. It is false. In order to PASS physics, chemistry, and engineering, you must be pretty good at mathematics.
Mathematics, chemistry and physics form much of the basis of engineering - do well at those and you should do well in engineering. Mathematics is the only applicable subject related to computer programming, but being good at the other two subjects indicates both a logical mindset and good memory for information, which are useful skills in any computer-related field.
Yes, math is more closely applicable to physics, chemistry, and engineering, than biology and programming are.
No.
Apparently, you haven't had much exposure to Physics, Chemistry, or Engineering, have you. Yes, they all do. In increasing order of mathematical intensity, they are Chemistry Engineering Physics
mainly physics, chemistry and mathematics will get you in any engineering field
CPE in chemistry stands for chemistry processing engineering. Chemical engineering is a branch of life sciences mixed with mathematics and economics.
Mathematics and physics are both required for computer science and computer engineering degrees; chemistry might not be, depending upon your individual school.