A categorized community-driven collection of awesome Ruby libraries, tools, frameworks, and software.
Awesome Ruby is a curated, community-driven collection of high-quality Ruby libraries, tools, frameworks, and software. It categorizes resources to help developers quickly find the essential components needed to build modern Ruby applications, from web development and databases to DevOps and e-commerce.
Ruby developers of all levels, from beginners seeking recommended tools to experienced engineers looking for specialized libraries or alternatives for their projects.
Developers choose Awesome Ruby because it provides a trusted, organized, and comprehensive directory of Ruby resources, saving time on research and ensuring they use community-vetted tools. Its categorization and focus on "essential" tools make it a go-to reference.
💎 A collection of awesome Ruby libraries, tools, frameworks and software
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Organized into over 100 categories like Web Frameworks, Testing, and DevOps, making it easy to browse specific domains as shown in the detailed table of contents.
Continuously updated with contributions from the Ruby community, following quality standards outlined in the contribution guidelines linked in the README.
Highlights 'essential Ruby' for building modern apps, focusing on practical, production-ready resources as stated in the project description.
Includes everything from core extensions and databases to e-commerce, CMS, and data visualization, ensuring broad utility across diverse Ruby projects.
As a community-driven project, some entries might not be regularly updated, leading to outdated information or dead links over time without active maintenance.
Lists resources without ratings, popularity scores, or easy filtering, making it hard to identify the most active or well-maintained tools from the vast collection.
Serves only as a directory; users must manually research and integrate tools, lacking features like dependency management or direct installation links found in package managers.