Quasar is a Vue.js based framework, which allows a web developer to quickly create responsive++ websites/apps in many flavours.
These include: SPAs (Single Page App), SSR (Server-side Rendered App) (+ optional PWA client takeover), PWAs (Progressive Web App), BEX (Browser Extension), Mobile Apps (Android, iOS, …) through Cordova or Capacitor, and multi-platform Desktop Apps (using Electron)
This is free and open source software.
Key Features
- Library of more than 70 high performance customizable Material Design web components.
- State-of-the-art UI (that follows Material Guidelines) for your websites and apps out of the box.
- Support for desktop and mobile browsers (including iOS Safari!) out of the box.
- Support for each build mode (SPA, SSR, PWA, Mobile app, Desktop app & Browser Extension).
- Tight integration with our own CLI.
- Easily customizable (CSS) and extendable (JS).
- Tree-shakable automatically.
strong>Website: quasar.dev
Support: GitHub Code Repository
Developer: Razvan Stoenescu
License: MIT License
Quasar Framework is written in JavaScript. Learn JavaScript with our recommended free books and free tutorials.
Related Software
| Mobile Application Development Frameworks | |
|---|---|
| React Native | Mobile application framework |
| Ionic Framework | SDK for hybrid mobile app development |
| Flutter | UI toolkit for building natively compiled applications |
| Quasar | Enterprise-ready cross-platform VueJs framework |
| Framework7 | Mobile HTML framework for building iOS and Android apps |
| Apache Cordova | Mobile application development framework |
| NativeScript | Develop mobile apps on Apple iOS and Android |
| Dioxus | React-like library for building fast, portable, and beautiful user interfaces |
| Uno Platform | Build single codebase native mobile, web, desktop and embedded apps |
| ZK | Ajax Web application framework |
Read our verdict in the software roundup.
Explore our comprehensive directory of recommended free and open source software. Our carefully curated collection spans every major software category.This directory is part of our ongoing series of informative articles for Linux enthusiasts. It features hundreds of detailed reviews, along with open source alternatives to proprietary solutions from major corporations such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, IBM, Cisco, Oracle, and Autodesk. You’ll also find interesting projects to try, hardware coverage, free programming books and tutorials, and much more. Discovered a useful open source Linux program that we haven’t covered yet? Let us know by completing this form. |

