A curated list of awesome programming, development, and technical support channels, groups, communities, and resources.
Awesome Community is a curated GitHub repository that serves as a directory for programming and development communities. It aggregates links to active discussion channels, support groups, and resources across various platforms like Stack Overflow, Reddit, and IRC, organized by programming language, platform, and website. It solves the problem of developers struggling to find relevant, high-quality communities for their specific tech interests.
Developers, programmers, and technical professionals seeking active communities for learning, support, and networking in specific programming languages, frameworks, or platforms.
Developers choose Awesome Community because it provides a single, well-organized source for discovering vetted communities, saving time compared to searching multiple platforms. Its curation ensures listed communities are active and relevant, following the trusted `awesome-*` list standard.
A curated list of awesome programming, development, technical support and discussion channels, groups, communities, resources and other 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.
Organized by website, language, and platform with a detailed index, making it easy to navigate specific tech interests like PHP frameworks or React Native.
Includes diverse platforms such as Stack Overflow, Reddit, IRC, Slack, and LinkedIn, ensuring broad access to discussion channels and support groups.
Maintains high standards by listing notable, active, and large communities, following the trusted awesome-* pattern for reliability.
Goes beyond links by including articles and books on community building, adding educational value for community managers.
Relies on manual contributions via GitHub, so it may lag behind new community formations or platform changes, requiring users to check commit history for recency.
Lacks search, filtering, or user ratings, making it less dynamic than dedicated community discovery tools that offer personalized recommendations.
Might miss emerging or niche communities not yet submitted, as evidenced by incomplete entries for languages like Julia or Scala in the README.