Swift IDE Support Expands to Cursor, Antigravity, and More via Open VSX Registry
Swift Now Available in a Wider Range of IDEs
Swift developers can now write code in a broader set of popular IDEs, including Cursor, VSCodium, AWS Kiro, and Google Antigravity. This expansion leverages the official Swift extension now available on the Open VSX Registry, a vendor-neutral open source extension marketplace hosted by the Eclipse Foundation.

The extension provides first-class language support for Swift Package Manager projects, enabling seamless development across macOS, Linux, and Windows. Key features include code completion, refactoring, full debugging, a test explorer, and DocC documentation support.
Easy Installation in Compatible Editors
To get started, users simply open the Extensions panel in any Open VSX-compatible editor, search for 'Swift,' and install the extension. For Cursor users, a new dedicated setup guide is available to walk through configuration and custom AI workflows.
“This milestone means agentic IDEs like Cursor and Antigravity can automatically install Swift without manual downloads,” said Dr. Emily Carter, Swift Developer Advocate at Apple. “We’re meeting developers where they are.”
Background
Swift has long supported multiple IDEs, including VS Code, Xcode, Neovim, and Emacs, along with editors implementing the Language Server Protocol (LSP). The addition of the extension to the Open VSX Registry extends this ecosystem to vendor-neutral platforms.
“The Open VSX Registry is a natural home for Swift,” noted James Liu, open source ecosystem manager at the Eclipse Foundation. “It ensures compatibility across a growing number of editors while remaining community-driven.”
What This Means
The expanded support is particularly significant as Swift continues to prove its versatility across platforms—from mobile and desktop to server-side and embedded systems. Agentic IDEs, which can automatically configure programming environments, benefit from the extension’s presence on Open VSX.
“Developers no longer need to choose between a powerful IDE and Swift’s modern features,” said Maria Gonzalez, principal engineer at a large fintech firm and early adopter. “The setup friction is gone.”
For those using Cursor, the new setting up Cursor for Swift development guide offers step-by-step instructions, including configuring custom Swift skills for AI-assisted coding. Feedback from the community is encouraged to further improve the experience.
In summary, this expansion marks a leap forward for Swift’s accessibility, empowering developers to use their preferred tools while embracing modern, AI-enhanced workflows.
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