Sorting the engineering major from hardest to easiest ?

Blue Bell lost their ABET accreditation. :frowning:

:)) :)) :))

Come on guys, HALF BAKED is the greatest flavor of all time!

And itā€™s interdisciplinary, to boot.

Tillamook Mudslide is hardest by far. Lots of wedges of chocolate in there. Very difficult to chew.

Having no experience with it, I must naturally assume that it is inferior to those that I have sampled. Sorry you made such an inferior choice.

Blue Bell seems to have regained regional accreditationā€¦ Wont do us much good in the Midwest but if youā€™re in the Texas areaā€¦ apply :slight_smile:

I donā€™t know the order I would choose, but I would use either a merge sort or a quick sort algorithm to perform this operation.

Are you out of your mind?!?!?!?!

Quicksortā€™s worst-case O(n^2) is simply crippling. What do you do if someone gives you an already sorted list?

I think we had a test once to come up with the absolutely worst possible sorting algorithm. I suggested random ordering the n elements then checking if theyā€™re sorted :slight_smile:

All engineering majors are hard, and the important thing to note is that it can vary by school. Usually EECS and chemE tend to be ranked among the hardest, while civil and IOE tend to be ranked among the easiest.

Let me tell you something, this is honestly not accepted, sounds technical arrogance, and very shallow.

I tell you something that most engineering disciplines are extremely technical. at least 2 to 2.5 years of Engineering program is the same program FOR ALL engineering disciplines.

For example; Mechanical Engineering and Aerospace Engineering programs are very similar except 1.5 year. Hence, some students do double-major for that. Furthermore, Mechanical Engineering has strong overlaps on Industrial Engineering in terms of Manufacturing and Materials.

Some students make jokes on other Engineering disciplines like Civil, Environmental, or Industrial/Manufacturing Engineering due to their technical arrogance. But the fact that I have Bsc in Industrial Engineering which who those think is the ā€œeasiestā€

and here:

Science classes:

Calculus I
Calculus II
Calculus III
Linear Algebra (Elements)
Differential Equations
Statistics and Probability I For Engneers
Statistics and Probability II For Engineers
Physics I (Calculus based)
Physics II (Calculus based)
Physics III (Calculus based)
Chemistry I

Engineering courses:

computer science I
intro to Engineering
Engineering graphics
Material science
manufacturing process
Electric circuits
Statics
Dynamics
Quality Engineering
Reliability Engineering
Computer Integrated Manufacturing

and much moreā€¦

However, the first two or two and half years of Engineering curriculum program generally has mainly pure math, Physics, and lastly Chemistry. then the last 1.5 to 2 years are not pure math/physics but more focused on its own specialty such as ā€œMechanicalā€ ā€œIndustrialā€ etcā€¦ which has theories, conceptions, and equations, and it is not just pure equations. Nonetheless, some courses in Industrial are hard and some other are mediumā€¦ It is just same thing with other Engineering majors

Bottom of the line, all Engineering majors are challenging, consumes a lot of time, always focused in every very details, solving math problems with accuracy etc. All Engineering majors have the same outcome of any engineering program. Lastly, if you have passion in Engineering, you will ace it nicely for sure.

P.S: Those who have technical arrogance, they mostly end up in Master of Business Administrationā€¦ It is ironic. Although MBA is good but just saying to those that MBA is way too much less technical.

Also, I forgot to mention that in Engineering program, especially IE you will learn to use Engineering softwares: Promodel, SolidWork, MATLAB, Lindo, MathCad, C++, and Pspice

I know that this is Halloween weekend, but thatā€™s no excuse to practice necromancy. Please let dead threads remain dead.

In honor of Hallloween and before somebody will close this thread, I would like to answer the question. The hardest of engineering major is whatever major that will provide the most money (high paying) for their first/initial or entry level job after college. Good luck to find one.