>>12779056>endgoalThe number one is getting to study math longer in grad school. If that flops, I'd like to pivot to development in areas I'm interested in, and finance seems interesting and high paying.
The geometry cirriculum did sound fun, but I'd worry with so many topics crammed into 8-12 weeks I'd only have a first impression of all the stuff, I'd rather go deeper and do less, but what do I know.
Thanks for the topology books. I know I can self study, but I'm not sure if not having topology courses on a transcript is a big negative despite self studying.
>>12779094I've learned set theory, I read that little Naive set theory book too. I don't know how deep set theory goes, but I'll take the intro. It'll surely introduce topology at least.
I like doing math. Well, I enjoy studying it in my free time anyway. Not sure if I'd like doing PhD work necessarily, but I have this feeling I'll regret not trying. I like proof based stuff a lot more than the mostly computational stuff I've done so far in my undergrad, I'm really looking forward to these more theoretical courses.
I'm not taking that many CS classes; I was going to double major, since I've filled all the lower division requirements, but at this point I'm just going to take a few more that I think are relevant to the work I'd like to do. Being that a lot of people drop PhDs, I think a fallback isn't a terrible idea.