You can't be good a everything.
Not necessarily, in fact, being good at math helps you calculate things in programming. You just need some practice and really good math and English skills
Just about any engineering course that's not specialized in computers. You might want to try your hand at computer programming anyway; you'll probably need SOME computer programming.
Given these two characteristics, there are four possibilities: Some people are good at math and have bad writing skills. Some people are good at math and have good writing skills. Some people are bad at math and have good writing skills. Some people are bad at math and have bad writing skills. Leaving aside what it means to be "good" or "bad" at these disciplines, it is likely that these groups of people have varying amounts of genetic predisposition for success at these aptitudes and their environments provided varying amounts of support or resistance to help them fulfill their levels of achievement. If you're suggesting a causal relationship, that to be "good" at one necessarily implies being "bad" at another, I don't think such generalizations are useful.
Because of the way the brain works, some people are good at both, and some are good at one but not the other
some people are good with numbers then words They use opposite sides of the brain. Left for maths and right for language.
programming requires a lot of basic math and some basic algebra. it can be hard to get a good job at programming withought knowing much math.
That's not necessarily true at all. It depends on the individual person. Some people find programming harder than math. Some people find math harder than programming. Some people find both programming and math to be pieces o' cake. Some people are afraid of both programming and math, and so they find both to be hard. And some people have no idea what programming or math is.
I highly doubt that you can generalize that. In other words, I doubt that all people, or most people who are good at math will be bad at programming.
Not necessarily, in fact, being good at math helps you calculate things in programming. You just need some practice and really good math and English skills
Perhaps you are new at it. However, if you are good at math, then that seems to indicate that you are good at abstract reasoning; so you can still learn it.
This is basically because there are some people that are good at one thing but not with other things. It is simply human nature to have differences.
HTML is not math.
Just about any engineering course that's not specialized in computers. You might want to try your hand at computer programming anyway; you'll probably need SOME computer programming.
Perhaps because 2 entirely different skill-sets are required?
programming and mathematics have nothing to do with each other:) programming is all about automation, which can be a very complex process. it's got more to do with logistics than math:)
Some people just don't pick up on a programming language as fast as others, it takes willpower and it also takes dedication. It will also depends on the language desired, if it is a higher level language trying to be learned right away it will be very difficult. But if its basic HTML then they should have no problem.
That's hard to believe, unless it's conceptual science, then people need to be good at math to learn science