A curated list of awesome Kotlin libraries, frameworks, tools, and resources inspired by awesome-java.
Awesome Kotlin is a curated directory of high-quality Kotlin-related resources including libraries, frameworks, tools, articles, videos, and learning materials. It helps Kotlin developers discover the best tools and resources in the ecosystem, saving time and ensuring quality.
Kotlin developers of all levels looking to discover libraries, tools, and learning resources, as well as project maintainers wanting to showcase their Kotlin projects to the community.
It provides a single, well-organized source for discovering the best Kotlin resources, saving developers from searching through scattered information while ensuring quality through community curation and maintenance.
A curated list of awesome Kotlin related stuff Inspired by awesome-java.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Inspired by awesome-java, it offers a carefully selected collection of Kotlin resources across libraries, tools, and learning materials, saving developers from sifting through low-quality options.
Maintained with contribution guidelines and discussion channels on Kotlin Slack, ensuring ongoing relevance and active community involvement in keeping the list current.
Provides RSS feeds for the latest articles, videos, slides, and updates, helping users stay informed about new developments without manually checking the list.
Includes a wide range of resource types from frameworks to articles, making it a one-stop reference for Kotlin developers exploring the ecosystem.
As a GitHub repository, updates depend on community contributions, which can lead to delays in reflecting the latest resources or changes, unlike automated feeds.
Lacks built-in search, filtering, or personalization tools, making it less efficient for specific queries compared to dynamic databases or specialized platforms.
Community curation might favor popular or well-established projects, potentially missing innovative but lesser-known tools or libraries that could be valuable.