A curated list of awesome Erlang libraries, resources, and tools for developers.
Awesome Erlang is a curated directory of high-quality Erlang libraries, frameworks, tools, and educational resources. It helps developers quickly find reliable packages and learning materials for building Erlang applications, from web development to distributed systems.
Erlang developers seeking vetted libraries and tools, as well as newcomers looking for learning resources to accelerate their understanding of the Erlang ecosystem.
It saves time by aggregating the best community-vetted resources in one place, following the trusted "awesome list" model to ensure quality and relevance for Erlang development.
A curated list of awesome Erlang libraries, resources and shiny things.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The list is community-vetted to include only high-quality resources, evidenced by categories like Web Frameworks listing reputable options such as Cowboy and ChicagoBoss from the README.
Comprehensively covers Erlang development areas from package management (Hex.pm) to debugging (tx) and distributed systems (Typhoon), as shown in the structured README categories.
Includes a dedicated Resources section with books like 'Learn You Some Erlang' and websites, streamlining skill improvement for developers.
Actively maintained with contributions, as indicated by the CONTRIBUTING.md file, ensuring the list stays relevant and updated over time.
It's a static markdown file without search functionality, dynamic filtering, or user interactivity, making navigation cumbersome for specific needs compared to package managers.
Provides only brief links and descriptions without detailed reviews, comparisons, or performance benchmarks, leaving developers to research each tool independently.
As a community project, updates might be slow or inconsistent, risking outdated links or missing newer libraries, as admitted in the reliance on contributor activity.
While it lists resources, it offers no practical tutorials, code snippets, or integration help, requiring additional effort for actual application development.