Thanks to maintainers working on projects like Material-UI, you can use Tidelift to give your teams access to a continuously curated stream of validated data about vetted components they need to make intelligent decisions, faster.
You can feel confident bringing Material-UI into your application’s dependency tree because the maintainers of Material-UI are paid by Tidelift to ensure their open source projects follow standardized secure software development practices.
Material-UI provides React components that implement Google's Material Design. Material-UI is available as an npm package.
It started in 2014, shortly after React came out to the public, and has over 40,000 stars in GitHub. Material-UI is one of the top user interface libraries available for React.
We interviewed Material-UI co-creator and maintainer Olivier Tassinari to learn more about how he manages to balance working on the popular React component library and a full-time job. Read the article here.
Material-UI is available via npm.
Meet Material-UI core maintainer, Olivier Tassinari:
"There are a vast array of open source projects out there, and not all of them are at the same quality level. Tidelift helps people make a more educated decision when evaluating an open source project. This helps alleviate the pressure--and stress--of choosing the best components and libraries when a big, corporate project depends on it."
Within days of using the Tidelift application, the Distributive team found a potential vulnerability that npm-audit hadn’t, and quickly and safely fixed those issues with Tidelift’s CLI tool.
Check out the new state of the open source maintainer report which included 11 key headlines coming out of our new survey of over 300 open source maintainers.
Tidelift named a Cool Vendor in the May 2022 Gartner Cool Vendors in Software Engineering