A curated list of awesome D frameworks, libraries, software, and resources.
Awesome D is a curated, community-driven list of resources for the D programming language. It compiles links to frameworks, libraries, software, documentation, and tools, serving as a directory to help developers explore and utilize the D ecosystem effectively. The project is inspired by other awesome lists and is maintained through community contributions.
D language developers, newcomers seeking learning materials, and experienced programmers looking for libraries or tools in specific domains like web development, game dev, or scientific computing.
It provides a single, organized, and vetted source for discovering D resources, saving developers time from scouring forums and wikis. Being open-source and community-updated ensures it reflects the current state of the ecosystem.
A curated list of awesome D documents, frameworks, libraries and software. Inspired by awesome-python.
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 links from official D forums, wikis, and GitHub repositories, listing hundreds of projects across domains like web frameworks, game development, and scientific computing, as detailed in the extensive table of contents.
Encourages submissions via GitHub issues and direct file edits, ensuring the list evolves with the D ecosystem, as stated in the README's contribution guidelines.
Organizes resources into logical sections such as compilers, IDEs, web frameworks, and game libraries, making it easy to navigate specific development needs without sifting through scattered sources.
Includes links to books, tutorials, blogs, and interactive tools like The Dlang Tour, providing pathways for both newcomers and experienced developers to deepen their D knowledge.
Relies on volunteer contributions, so some entries, particularly in the 'Unmaintained' section, may not reflect current project status, compatibility, or active development, risking outdated recommendations.
Serves as a directory without user reviews, ratings, or performance benchmarks, requiring developers to independently vet each resource for suitability, stability, and community support.
Limited to static links without interactive features like discussion forums, live updates, or integrated search, reducing its utility for real-time problem-solving or dynamic community engagement.