A curated list of amazingly awesome Elixir and Erlang libraries, resources, and shiny things.
Awesome Elixir is a curated, community-maintained list of high-quality Elixir and Erlang libraries, resources, and tools. It organizes packages into categories like web frameworks, databases, and machine learning, helping developers quickly find reliable solutions for their projects. The project is inspired by other awesome-* lists and serves as a central directory for the Elixir ecosystem.
Elixir and Erlang developers of all levels seeking to discover libraries, tools, and learning resources. It's especially useful for newcomers exploring the ecosystem and experienced developers looking for specialized packages.
Developers choose Awesome Elixir because it provides a trusted, categorized, and up-to-date directory, saving time compared to scattered searches. Its community-driven curation ensures quality, and its comprehensive scope covers nearly every development domain within the Elixir world.
A curated list of amazingly awesome Elixir and Erlang libraries, resources and shiny things. Updates:
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Handpicked libraries ensure relevance and high standards, as the list is community-maintained with contributions via GitHub issues, preventing low-quality entries.
Organized into over 80 categories like Actors and AI, making it easy to find tools for specific domains, as shown in the detailed table of contents.
Encourages contributions through GitHub, allowing the list to stay current with the evolving ecosystem, evidenced by active CI badges and issue tracking.
Follows the awesome-* list format, providing a structured and easy-to-navigate resource for developers accustomed to similar directories.
Provides only links and brief descriptions without in-depth reviews, usage examples, or comparisons, which limits decision-making for developers.
Relies on manual community contributions, leading to potential delays in adding new or trending libraries, unlike automated package managers.
As a Markdown-based list, it lacks interactive features like search, filtering, or sorting, making it less efficient for large-scale exploration.