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Yes, by chance I came across the MIT degree today. It looks very interesting and probably more suitable from a quant finance perspective. Are you doing this degree?
Congrats on getting accepted into the MSc at Imperial.
Would you mine if I sent you a personal message and maybe got your email so I could ask you a few questions?
Thanks for replying bigbadwolf.
Yes, ideally I would like to study in Oslo (UiO), but I could move to Trondheim and NTNU if you think that is a better option? I don't really know that much about what they have to offer in Trondheim.
You are correct, higher ed is free, but there is the cost of living (without a full time job). But I guess time is the main "issue". But what is another 2-3 years of undergraduate study if you look at the big picture?
Do you know much about UiO or NTNU?
The math finance course seems to lack a stochastic calculus component (though there is a stochastic processes course). But that's okay since I think this is an undergrad program (?)
If there's a numerical analysis course there, I missed seeing it.
I think the program should be fine for European finance masters, which tend to be weak on the programming side and focus more on math and finance. Won't be so good for American quant finance masters, which assume a strong coding background.
I think the program should be fine for European finance masters, which tend to be weak on the programming side and focus more on math and finance.
Both the OO course and "algorithms and datastructures" are in Java, although pseudo-code is used a lot in the later course. Although not optimal, is the transition from Java to C++ that big?
The math finance course has no stochastic calculus component. It only uses discrete time. We used this book by Pliska which is very rigorous and mathematical. And yes, this is an undergrad program. There are also a couple of elective courses where you could take for example Stochastic Analysis, but I think this is maybe a bit heavy for an undergrad course? And in the project at the end you can certainly study stochastic calculus if you want.
You could take this course, but I think this is also a bit heavy. There is also a course in Numerical Linear Algebra you can take. And there are also some numerical analysis integrated in MAT-INF1100.
Which subjects do you think are missing in this degree? You can take PDE's and Parallell Programming as electives so you have 50 of 180 ECTS in CS. In PDE's we use Matlab or Python and in PP we use C.
Did you btw mean European Mathematical Finance masters?