Swift Expands IDE Ecosystem: Now Available on Open VSX and Agentic IDEs
Swift Expands IDE Ecosystem: Now Available on Open VSX and Agentic IDEs
Swift developers now have even more flexibility in choosing their development environment. The Swift programming language has officially expanded its IDE support to include a broader range of popular editors, such as Cursor, VSCodium, AWS Kiro, and Google Antigravity. This expansion leverages the power of the Open VSX Registry, where the official Swift extension is now available, making it easier than ever to write Swift code across platforms.
A New Era of Cross-Platform Swift Development
Swift has long been a versatile language, supporting development through multiple IDEs like Xcode, VS Code, Neovim, and Emacs. It also works seamlessly with editors that implement the Language Server Protocol (LSP). This new milestone—making the Swift VS Code extension available on Open VSX—extends that versatility even further, particularly for agentic IDEs that are gaining traction in modern development workflows.

The Open VSX Milestone
The Open VSX Registry, a vendor-neutral, open-source extension registry hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, now hosts the official Swift extension for VS Code. This move opens up first-class language support for projects built with Swift Package Manager across macOS, Linux, and Windows. Developers can now enjoy features like code completion, refactoring, full debugging support, a test explorer, and DocC support—all from within any Open VSX-compatible editor.
Key Features of the Swift Extension
The extension delivers a comprehensive development experience. Key highlights include:
- Code completion with intelligent suggestions
- Refactoring tools for cleaner, more maintainable code
- Full debugging support with breakpoints and variable inspection
- Test explorer to run and manage test suites
- DocC support for creating rich documentation
These features make Swift development on non-Apple platforms more productive and streamlined.
Seamless Integration with Popular IDEs
With the extension now on Open VSX, IDEs that support the Open VSX Registry can automatically install Swift with no manual download required. This is especially significant for agentic IDEs like Cursor and Antigravity, which can now sense Swift projects and provide immediate support.
Cursor, VSCodium, and More
Among the newly supported editors are Cursor, a modern AI-powered code editor; VSCodium, a free/libre open-source build of VS Code; AWS Kiro, a cloud-friendly IDE; and Google Antigravity, an experimental editor. All these can tap into the Open VSX Registry to install the Swift extension effortlessly.
Setting Up Swift in Cursor
For Cursor users, getting started is particularly straightforward. There’s a dedicated guide Setting up Cursor for Swift Development that walks through the setup process, explains available features, and shows how to configure custom Swift skills for AI workflows. This guide is an excellent resource for developers looking to maximize their productivity with Swift in an agentic environment.
How to Get Started
To start using the Swift extension in any Open VSX-compatible editor, follow these simple steps:
- Open the Extensions panel in your editor.
- Search for Swift.
- Install the official Swift extension.
If you’re using Cursor, we encourage you to check out the specialized guide mentioned above to explore the deeper integration and AI-assisted coding capabilities.
Swift now supports a wider range of modern editors and IDEs, meeting developers wherever they prefer to work. Download the extension today, try it out in your editor of choice, and don’t forget to share your feedback with the community.
Related Articles
- 8 Ways AI Coding Tools Are Overwhelming Code Review (And How to Fix It)
- 8 Engineering Secrets Behind GitHub Copilot CLI's Animated ASCII Banner
- Global Summit Charts Fossil Fuel Exit: Key Climate Developments from Santa Marta and Beyond
- GitHub Copilot CLI Debuts Dual-Mode System: Interactive and Non-Interactive Commands Unleashed
- 10 Reasons Why I Switched from OneDrive to Ente Photos for Good
- Cloud-Dependent Apps Found Vulnerable: Developer Urges Shift to Local-First Architecture
- HashiCorp Vault Unveils AI Agent Security: Identity and Authorization for Autonomous Systems
- Alaska’s Tracy Arm Fjord Records Second-Highest Tsunami in History After Massive Landslide