A curated list of awesome Deno modules, tools, resources, and learning materials.
Awesome Deno is a curated directory of resources for the Deno JavaScript and TypeScript runtime. It aggregates the best modules, tools, articles, and learning materials to help developers build applications with Deno. The list is organized by categories like web frameworks, databases, CLI utilities, and testing libraries.
Deno developers seeking libraries, tools, or learning resources, and newcomers looking to explore the Deno ecosystem. It's also valuable for maintainers wanting to discover or promote their Deno projects.
It saves time by providing a centralized, vetted collection of Deno resources, eliminating the need to search scattered sources. The list is community-driven and frequently updated, ensuring relevance and quality.
Curated list of awesome things related to Deno
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 best Deno modules like Oak, Hono, and tools like dmm, dvm, covering over 20 categories from web frameworks to databases, as detailed in the Modules and Tools sections.
Includes official docs, multilingual articles, and presentations such as Ryan Dahl's JSConf EU talk, providing a one-stop shop for Deno education across Docs, Articles, and Presentations.
Continuously updated with community submissions, ensuring relevance with new projects like Fresh and integrations like Netlify Edge Functions, as highlighted in the philosophy and Showcases.
Well-organized into clear categories like Modules, Tools, and Integrations, making it easy to navigate and find specific resources without scattered searches.
As a GitHub repo, it lacks dynamic features like search or automated updates, forcing users to manually browse through extensive markdown files to find resources.
While curated, it includes many community projects with no built-in rating system, so users must independently verify the maintenance and reliability of listed modules.
Updates depend on manual contributions, so it may not reflect the latest deprecations or version changes in real-time, unlike live registries such as JSR.