A curated list of ClojureScript frameworks, libraries, books, and resources for web development.
Awesome ClojureScript is a community-driven curated list of resources for ClojureScript, a dialect of Clojure that compiles to JavaScript. It provides developers with organized collections of frameworks, libraries, books, courses, and tools to build web applications. The project solves the problem of discovering high-quality ClojureScript resources by maintaining a comprehensive, well-structured directory.
ClojureScript developers, especially those building single-page applications, interactive web UIs, or full-stack web apps. It's also valuable for developers new to ClojureScript looking for learning materials and established tools.
Developers choose Awesome ClojureScript because it offers a centralized, community-vetted directory that saves time searching for reliable libraries and learning resources. Its organized structure and active maintenance make it the go-to reference for the ClojureScript ecosystem.
A community driven list of ClojureScript frameworks, libraries and wrappers.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Organizes resources across 20+ categories like React interfaces, state management, and routing, providing a one-stop reference for ClojureScript ecosystems.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy with contributions from the ClojureScript community, ensuring vetted and relevant entries as highlighted in the Contributing section.
Includes books, courses, and videos such as 'ClojureScript Unraveled' and interactive koans, catering to both beginners and advanced developers.
Lists key frameworks like Reagent, re-frame, and Om, along with development tools like shadow-cljs and Lumo, covering the full application lifecycle.
As a curated GitHub list, it may not reflect the latest library versions or new projects promptly, requiring users to verify links and information independently.
Provides only links and brief descriptions without in-depth reviews or compatibility guidance, leaving developers to evaluate each resource on their own.
Lacks search filters, dependency checks, or automated recommendations, limiting its utility compared to package managers or integrated development tools.