What is Web Starter Kit?
Web Starter Kit is a starting point for multi-screen web development. It encompasses opinionated recommendations on boilerplate and tooling for building an experience that works great across multiple devices. We help you stay productive and aligned with the best practices outlined in Google's Web Fundamentals.
Web Starter Kit is a tool in the Cross-Platform Mobile Development category of a tech stack.
Web Starter Kit is an open source tool with 18.4K GitHub stars and 3K GitHub forks. Here’s a link to Web Starter Kit's open source repository on GitHub
Who uses Web Starter Kit?
Companies
Developers
174 developers on StackShare have stated that they use Web Starter Kit.
Pros of Web Starter Kit
3
Web Starter Kit's Features
- Multi-device responsive boilerplate
- Living component style guide
- Cross-device Synchronization
- Live Browser Reloading
- Performance optimization
- Built in HTTP Server
- PageSpeed Insights Reporting
- Sass support
Web Starter Kit Alternatives & Comparisons
What are some alternatives to Web Starter Kit?
Bootstrap
Bootstrap is the most popular HTML, CSS, and JS framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web.
JavaScript
JavaScript is most known as the scripting language for Web pages, but used in many non-browser environments as well such as node.js or Apache CouchDB. It is a prototype-based, multi-paradigm scripting language that is dynamic,and supports object-oriented, imperative, and functional programming styles.
Python
Python is a general purpose programming language created by Guido Van Rossum. Python is most praised for its elegant syntax and readable code, if you are just beginning your programming career python suits you best.
Node.js
Node.js uses an event-driven, non-blocking I/O model that makes it lightweight and efficient, perfect for data-intensive real-time applications that run across distributed devices.
HTML5
HTML5 is a core technology markup language of the Internet used for structuring and presenting content for the World Wide Web. As of October 2014 this is the final and complete fifth revision of the HTML standard of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The previous version, HTML 4, was standardised in 1997.