A curated collection of resources for the Blazor .NET web framework, including libraries, tutorials, sample projects, and tools.
Awesome Blazor is a curated collection of resources for the Blazor .NET web framework. It aggregates libraries, sample projects, tutorials, tools, and community content to help developers learn and build with Blazor efficiently. The project solves the problem of scattered information by providing a single, organized reference point for the Blazor ecosystem.
.NET developers and teams adopting or exploring Blazor for building interactive web applications. It's especially valuable for those seeking libraries, real-world examples, or learning materials to accelerate their Blazor projects.
Developers choose Awesome Blazor because it saves time searching for quality Blazor resources. Its community-driven curation ensures relevance and comprehensiveness, offering a trusted directory that grows with the framework's ecosystem.
Resources for Blazor, a .NET web framework using C#/Razor and HTML that runs in the browser with WebAssembly.
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Aggregates libraries, samples, tutorials, and tools in one place, saving developers from scattered searches, as evidenced by sections like Templates, Sample Projects, and Libraries.
Actively maintained with contributions from the Blazor community, ensuring relevance through regular updates and a growing contributor list, per the README's contribution guidelines.
Organizes resources into clear categories such as Real-World Applications and Tutorials, making it easy to find specific content without sifting through disorganized links.
Links to the Awesome Blazor Browser website for enhanced searchability, allowing users to query the list efficiently instead of manually browsing.
Merely lists external resources without integration or quality guarantees; users must navigate away to access them, which can be inconvenient and risk broken links.
Relies on community contributions without strict vetting, so some listed resources may be outdated, poorly maintained, or lack documentation, as the README admits it's a collection.
As a community project, updates might lag behind Blazor's rapid release cycles, risking outdated information compared to official sources or real-time feeds.