A curated list of awesome resources, tools, frameworks, and libraries for the Bun JavaScript runtime.
Awesome Bun is a curated list of awesome resources, tools, frameworks, and libraries specifically for the Bun JavaScript runtime. It aggregates community-contributed content to help developers discover everything they need to build with Bun, from essential documentation to advanced tooling. The project solves the problem of fragmented information by providing a single, organized repository for Bun-related resources.
JavaScript and TypeScript developers who are using or exploring Bun for their projects, including those building web applications, APIs, or tools with Bun's runtime and bundler capabilities.
Developers choose Awesome Bun because it offers a centralized, community-vetted collection of resources that saves time searching across disparate sources. Its comprehensive categorization and active maintenance ensure users find relevant, high-quality tools and frameworks optimized for Bun's performance.
⚡️ A curated list of awesome things related to Bun
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates essentials, articles, boilerplates, and tools in one place, saving developers time from scattered searches. Evidence: Organized sections like 'Essentials', 'Articles', 'Boilerplates', and 'Tools'.
Follows the awesome list model with community contributions, ensuring resources are peer-reviewed and relevant. Evidence: The 'Contributing' section and philosophy of community-driven maintenance.
Highlights optimized frameworks like Elysia and Hono, helping developers choose the right tools for Bun. Evidence: Detailed 'Extensions' section with frameworks, libraries, and utilities.
Includes latest tools such as bun.new for instant playgrounds and setup-bun for GitHub Actions, keeping pace with Bun's ecosystem. Evidence: Tools section listing bun.new, setup-bun, and IDE extensions.
Relies on community contributions, so it may not always have the most recent resources or updates, potentially missing new tools. Evidence: No automatic update mechanism; depends on pull requests from users.
While curated, linked resources aren't rigorously vetted for accuracy or maintenance, risking outdated or low-quality content. Evidence: Community contributions without strict moderation or version tracking.
Provides listings but doesn't offer detailed evaluations or benchmarks between similar tools, leaving users to research independently. Evidence: Sections like 'Framework benchmarks' are linked but not analyzed within the list.