A curated list of awesome tools, resources, and workflow tips for building a productive development environment.
Awesome Dev Env is a curated GitHub repository listing tools, resources, and tips for building an efficient development environment. It helps developers discover and adopt software that enhances their workflow, from editors and shells to debugging and presentation tools. The project organizes recommendations into categories like Git, terminal, data, and orchestration for easy browsing.
Developers, DevOps engineers, and technical leads looking to optimize their local or team development setups with proven tools and practices.
It saves time by aggregating community-vetted tools in one place, reduces tooling research overhead, and exposes developers to lesser-known utilities that can significantly boost productivity.
A curated list of awesome tools, resources and workflow tips making an awesome development environment.
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 tools across diverse areas like editors, Git, shell, terminal, and workflow, serving as a one-stop reference. Evidence: README includes sections from Admins to Workflow with specific tools listed.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy, focusing on practical, widely adopted resources to avoid clutter. Evidence: Inspired by awesome-go and has contributing guidelines to maintain standards.
Alphabetically sorted within categories with a clear table of contents, facilitating quick tool lookup. Evidence: README states 'List is alphabetically sorted' and provides a content index.
Includes tips and utilities for streamlining development tasks, such as file watching and environment management. Evidence: Sections like Workflow list tools like fswatch and guard for real-time updates.
Relies on community contributions without scheduled updates, so tools may become deprecated or miss new releases. Evidence: No update frequency mentioned; relies on issue tracking for changes.
Provides only brief listings without reviews, comparisons, or installation instructions, leaving users to research further. Evidence: README is a link-based list with no detailed evaluations or tutorials.
Skews towards OSX and Linux tools, with limited coverage for Windows or cross-platform options, as noted in README tags. Evidence: Many tools like iTerm2 and Alfred are marked OSX, with sparse WIN tags.
Tools are added by community without quality assurance, which might include niche or less reliable options. Evidence: Contributing guidelines focus on sorting and issues, not rigorous evaluation criteria.