A curated list of Quarto talks, tools, examples, and articles for the open-source scientific publishing system.
Awesome Quarto is a community-maintained, curated directory of resources for Quarto, an open-source scientific and technical publishing system. It aggregates tutorials, packages, extensions, editor integrations, and real-world examples to help users learn and enhance their workflows with Quarto. The project serves as a central hub for discovering tools and best practices across multiple programming languages and output formats.
Data scientists, researchers, academics, and technical writers who use Quarto for creating reproducible reports, websites, books, presentations, and dashboards. It is particularly valuable for users seeking to migrate from R Markdown, integrate Quarto with CI/CD pipelines, or find language-specific packages for R, Python, or Julia.
Developers choose Awesome Quarto because it provides a comprehensive, vetted collection of resources in one place, saving time compared to scattered searches. Its unique value lies in community-driven curation, covering practical use cases like CI/CD automation, extension ecosystems, and multi-language support, which are not fully aggregated in official documentation alone.
A curated list of Quarto talks, tools, examples & articles! Contributions welcome!
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 official documentation, tutorials, blogs, talks, and examples in one place, eliminating scattered searches across the web.
Highlights packages for R, Julia, and Python, along with IDE integrations for VS Code, RStudio, and Neovim, as detailed in the Libraries and Supported editors sections.
Showcases real-world examples like presentations, websites, and books, providing templates and use cases to jumpstart Quarto projects.
Includes links to Quarto GitHub Actions and tutorials for automating rendering and deployment, helping users streamline publishing workflows.
As a community-curated list, linked resources lack standardized vetting, forcing users to independently assess credibility and relevance.
Does not offer built-in tools or interactive features; users must manually navigate external links without integrated search or management capabilities.
Relies on community contributions, which may result in delays in adding new Quarto features or overlooking niche areas and less popular languages.