A curated list of Material-UI resources, tools, components, and boilerplates for React developers.
Awesome Material-UI is a curated GitHub repository listing resources, tools, components, and boilerplates related to the Material-UI React library. It helps developers quickly find extensions, tutorials, and community projects that enhance their use of Material-UI for building web interfaces. The list is community-maintained to ensure it stays up-to-date with the ecosystem.
React developers using or evaluating Material-UI for their projects, especially those looking for third-party components, theme tools, or starter templates.
It saves time by aggregating scattered resources into one trusted list, offers a wide range of ready-to-use components and tools, and is community-driven for ongoing relevance.
A curated list of Material-UI resources and related projects. The main idea is that everyone can contribute here, so we can have a central repository of informations about Material-UI that we keep up-to-date
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 scattered Material-UI tools, components, and tutorials into one place, saving developers time from manual searches, as seen in the categorized sections for articles, tools, and boilerplates.
Allows ongoing contributions to keep the list current with the evolving ecosystem, ensuring it reflects new tools and updates, per the contributing guidelines linked in the README.
Includes diverse resources like VS Code extensions, theme generators, and third-party components (e.g., chip inputs, carousels), covering multiple aspects of Material-UI development.
Offers boilerplates for frameworks like Create React App and Gatsby, providing ready-to-use templates that integrate Material-UI, such as the TypeScript and Redux examples listed.
As a community-curated list, it lacks vetting for resource reliability; some links may be outdated or to unmaintained projects, requiring users to verify quality independently.
The list doesn't automatically sync with source changes, so developers must manually check for broken links or new versions, risking reliance on stale information.
Exclusively serves Material-UI users, offering no value for those exploring alternative React libraries or multi-framework projects, which limits its utility.