En Mon, 25 Oct 2010 13:22:02 +0200, Bruno Medeiros <[email protected]> escribió:

On 22/10/2010 15:56, Diego Cano Lagneaux wrote:
Well, you think wrongly. :)
If you look at the top universities worldwide, the majority of them
have only one "computer programming" undergraduate degree. Sometimes
it is called "Computer Science" (typical in the US), other times it is
called "Computer Engineering", "Informatics Engineering", "Software
Engineering", "Informatics Science" or something like that (typical in
Europe), but despite the different names they are essentially the
same: courses designed to _teach and educate future software engineers_.

I must nuance: as an European* "Informatics (and Applied Maths**)
engineer", I can say this degree is not 'Software engineer' but indeed
'whole computer engineer' as we studied both software and hardware, to
the point of building a complete (simulated) processor.
Furthermore, I can't recall they told us about profiling tools, but it
was 10 years ago and I skiped a few classes, so it means nothing.


Which degree did 'Software engineers' take then?

Well, depends of what you mean by "Software engineer". They could take a 3 years 'informatics' degree, which is not an engineering degree (even if it's called 'technical engineering in Spain) but is perfect for coders, or take the full 'informatics engineering' and just specialize later (or forget everything they don't need), for a more general and advanced degree. In most Europe, Engineering is always a 5 years (masters) degree, oriented to big project developers who'll (supposedly) lead teams. I've heard it's different in the Anglosaxon systems.

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