A curated list of awesome resources, tools, projects, and languages related to the WebAssembly (wasm) ecosystem.
Awesome Wasm is a curated GitHub repository that serves as a directory for the WebAssembly ecosystem. It collects and organizes links to tools, frameworks, languages, tutorials, articles, and projects related to WebAssembly, helping developers discover resources to learn, build, and integrate WebAssembly into their applications.
Developers, researchers, and educators interested in WebAssembly, including those exploring its use cases, seeking learning materials, or looking for specific tools and libraries within the wasm ecosystem.
It saves time by aggregating high-quality, community-vetted resources in one place, following the trusted "awesome list" format. Unlike scattered searches, it provides a structured, comprehensive overview of the entire WebAssembly landscape.
😎 Curated list of awesome things regarding the WebAssembly (wasm) ecosystem.
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 to official docs, tutorials, projects, and tools across the entire WebAssembly ecosystem, as evidenced by sections like Compilers, Languages, and Projects with over 20 categories.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy with contribution guidelines, ensuring resources are vetted and updated by the community, which maintains high-quality, relevant entries.
Organized into clear categories such as Tutorials, Languages, Tools, and Demos, making it straightforward to find specific types of resources without overwhelming users.
Documents support for various languages compiling to WebAssembly, including Rust, Go, AssemblyScript, and more, with dedicated sections that help developers choose the right toolchain.
As a static, manually updated list, it relies on community contributions, so some links may be broken or outdated without regular maintenance, as noted by the lack of automated checks.
While curated, it doesn't rate or review resources, so users must assess quality and relevance themselves, which can lead to information overload for newcomers.
Doesn't include built-in search, comments, or ratings, limiting engagement and discovery beyond browsing, as it's primarily a GitHub markdown file.