Maths and CS majoring is a meme now?

So a friend of mine is in majoring in both CS and Mathematics.
He sent me the details of what he learned in his first 3 years in Uni.
In his 5th and 6th semester he focused on CS courses, so most are CS courses in those sems.
What do you people think of the course structure, the material taught?
Link to the course details:-
drive.google.com/open?id=1Yyh2_kXqr-4vHrQ6z-E5y1XRcNZEcf_2

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drive.google.com/open?id=1Yyh2_kXqr-4vHrQ6z-E5y1XRcNZEcf_2
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I'm double majoring in both I'm in my second year, and I don't regret it

I'm double majoring in both I'm in my second year, and I deeply regret it

I'm double majoring in both I'm in my second year, and I don't regret it

>the virgin math+cs
>the chad EECS

Most cs majors are only two or three classes away from a math degree. Not really impressive because when everyone is a math major nobody is a math major. At least if you double major in bio and math you have an advantage above your fellow biologists

I'm in computer science at UCLA. It's not a meme. Shit is tough and theory heavy

>no computer architecture courses
>no system design(OS, distributed)
>no compilers
pretty shit course schedule user

I'm double majoring in both I'm in my seccond year, and I'm indifferent about it

What classes did you take this semester? What are you taking next semester?

Why?

I'm double majoring in both I'm in my second year, and I have a bent penis

>drive.google.com/open?id=1Yyh2_kXqr-4vHrQ6z-E5y1XRcNZEcf_2
>Calculus 1 is actually Analysis 1

He's clearly a European, not a burger. "CS is a meme" applies to 'merika.

>advanced programming in python
Wew

The first 3 years of uni literally doesn't matter, you'll learn the interesting stuff in your 5th year

this, he's going to graduate without knowing memory management, how sockets and FDs work, or ever having written assembler.

that's totally possible, hard to say without reading the course description if it's bs or not. it could be a functional programming course, or be about using python's scientific computing libraries etc.

Wow pytorch is really advanced...

It's definitely advanced

If you are a Physics or Engineering major you are a few classes away from a Math degree also. The thing is though, Physicists and Engineers actually use higher level math in their work while CS majors do not even touch calculus in their work.

Those are the same subjects I cover in calculus and the universities in my country are so shit I'm ashamed of even mentioning the country's name.

>having such a meme major that you need a second one to compensate