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Is there physics in IT professions at the university?
Due to my laziness, during a certain period of the school curriculum, I missed a lot of physics lessons, because I'm going to enter an IT specialist (mostly front-end development), I want to know if it's worth catching up with the physics program now, is there, in principle, physics on such professions at the university, and if so, how difficult is it compared to school?
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General education standards, which contain a list of disciplines and even topics studied, are publicly available on the website of the educational institution (such is the law). Go to the site, download the standard of the desired specialty and find everything in it.
We had thermodynamics, electrodynamics, quantum physics. Faculty of Cybernetics
There is. If school is difficult for you, then it will be unrealistically difficult here. Often there is some kind of theory of electrical circuits, etc.
Since IT specialists are a section of technical specialties, then the reproach goes to technical disciplines in any case.
I don’t know exactly how it will be in the specialties of webers / front-enders, but physics will definitely be around it. Perhaps in the first courses there will be only general physics, perhaps, as a general practice, there will be subjects related to electrics.
In general, as the Armenian Radio said , everything depends on the tempo plan for a particular specialty at a particular university.
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