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Is there physics in the specialization "Applied Informatics" after the 9th grade?
I plan to go to college to major in applied computer science, but the fact is that I am very bad at physics. Well, I don't understand her at all. With mathematics, I'm on you, I understand it very well, I'm also fine with computer science. Is it worth going here, do you think? Will there be a lot of physics (especially after the 1st course)? And is programming strongly related to physics?
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Programming?
2 semesters of the 1st year will be physics as part of the school curriculum of grades 10-11, in fact, like other subjects. In the first year, on the basis of 9 classes, you briefly master 2 years of school.
so-called. "training program".
This is not secret information - ask in the educational part of the college and they will give you, say that you plan to do next year.
There is a list of subjects and volume (in teaching hours).
It is impossible to say in absentia how much physics you dislike.
Different educational institutions can have very different curricula, even if the specialty is different.
In particular, when I was studying (though not at a college, but at a university), we had a lot of physics just because a couple of teachers in our mathematical department were extremely interested in mathematical modeling of physical processes. They were honored professors and we were given an extended physics course specifically for them.
So anything can be.
Just ask for curricula for the chosen specialty in the college of your choice and read for yourself what is written in the curricula.
Gamedev is probably connected with physics. You need to understand what acceleration, inertia, etc. are. But this is the base level. It also happens that you need to write the equations of motion from scratch, but this will not necessarily require you. You can always: 1. Bring a specialist with knowledge of physics to the project. 2. Learn yourself when you understand what exactly you need to learn.
Others will tell you about other areas :)
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