Swift Breaks New Ground: Official Extension Now Available Across Major IDEs and AI-Powered Editors
Swift Language Extension Hits Open VSX Registry
Cupertino, CA — The official Swift extension has been published on the Open VSX Registry, the open-source extension marketplace hosted by the Eclipse Foundation. This move instantly unlocks first-class Swift support in a growing roster of popular IDEs, including Cursor, VSCodium, AWS Kiro, and Google Antigravity.

Developers can now install the extension directly from the Extensions panel in any Open VSX‑compatible editor by searching for ‘Swift’. No manual download is required, and agentic IDEs like Cursor and Antigravity can auto‑install Swift on launch.
What the Extension Delivers
The extension provides code completion, refactoring, full debugging support, a test explorer, and DocC documentation rendering. It works seamlessly with Swift Package Manager projects across macOS, Linux, and Windows.
“This is a huge step for the Swift ecosystem,” said a spokesperson for the Swift project. “By being on Open VSX, we eliminate the friction of manual extension sideloading and make Swift instantly accessible in the tools developers already use.”
Background: From Xcode to Everywhere
Swift has long supported development in Xcode, VS Code, Neovim, and Emacs, as well as any editor implementing the Language Server Protocol (LSP). However, distribution of the VS Code extension was previously limited to the Microsoft Marketplace, leaving editors that rely on Open VSX without an official path.
With this release, the gap is closed. The Swift extension now lives in a vendor‑neutral registry, ensuring that open‑source and third‑party editors can offer the same experience as VS Code.
What This Means for Developers
Cross‑platform parity — Swift developers on Windows, Linux, and macOS get identical tooling no matter which Open VSX‑based editor they choose. Agentic IDEs, which increasingly rely on auto‑discovery of tools, can now treat Swift like a first‑class citizen.
AI workflow integration — In editors like Cursor, the extension enables custom Swift skills for AI coding assistants. A dedicated setup guide is already available, walking users through configuring AI workflows alongside the extension.
Ecosystem momentum — The move signals that Swift is serious about being a general‑purpose language for server, embedded, and AI applications, not just Apple platforms.
“We’re meeting developers where they are,” the spokesperson added. “Whether you’re building in a terminal with Neovim or pairing with an AI in Cursor, Swift should just work.”
How to Get Started
Open the Extensions panel in any Open VSX‑compatible editor (Cursor, VSCodium, Kiro, Antigravity, etc.), search for ‘Swift’, and install. For Cursor users, a dedicated guide details setup and custom AI skill configuration.
Download the extension today, try it in your editor of choice, and share your feedback with the Swift community.
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