A curated list of awesome resources for Inertia.js, a tool for building single-page apps with server-side routing.
Awesome Inertia.js is a curated list of resources for Inertia.js, a tool that enables developers to build single-page applications using classic server-side routing and controllers. It aggregates official documentation, client and server adapters, starter kits, packages, articles, and example projects to help developers effectively use Inertia.js in their stacks. The list is maintained by the community and follows the awesome-list format for easy navigation and contribution.
Full-stack developers and teams using or evaluating Inertia.js for building modern web applications with server-driven architectures, particularly those working with Laravel, Rails, Django, or similar backend frameworks paired with Vue.js, React, or Svelte.
It saves developers significant time by providing a centralized, vetted collection of Inertia.js resources, eliminating the need to scour the internet for adapters, tools, and best practices. The list is actively maintained, follows quality standards through linting, and showcases real-world implementations across diverse technology stacks.
A curated list of awesome Inertia.js resources
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Organizes resources into clear categories like adapters, presets, and examples, as shown in the README's Contents section, making it easy to navigate.
Lists client-side adapters for Vue.js, React, Svelte, and server-side adapters for Laravel, Rails, Django, and more, providing extensive multi-stack options.
Includes starter kits like Laravel Breeze and Jetstream, helping developers quickly bootstrap Inertia.js projects with minimal configuration.
Features multiple Ping CRM demo implementations across different tech stacks, offering real-world reference points for understanding Inertia.js usage.
As a community-driven list, updates may be slower than official sources, potentially missing the latest packages or breaking changes.
Provides only links without in-depth reviews or quality assessments, leaving users to evaluate resource reliability and suitability on their own.
Relies on community contributions, so some listed resources might be outdated or poorly maintained, leading to variable usefulness.