It is often echoed that mathematicians make excellent software engineers, and that their logic-adjacent work will translate efficiently into coding and designing.

I have found this to be almost universally untrue. I might even say the inverse is true.

While I and many of my peers have capacity to navigate the mathematical world, it certainly is not what sets us (at least me) apart when designing clever algorithms and software tricks.

Point being: I dont think the property/trait that makes good programmers is mathematical literacy.

I would love to hear what others experience is regarding this.

  • CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I would say, having an affinity for math can be a sign of affinity for programming.

    Logical abstract thinking, order of operations, and problem solving all transfer. A for loop is just a summation equation for example.

    But id say in today’s high level development, being math centric is less important.