Swift Breaks IDE Barriers: Official Extension Now Available on Open VSX Registry

Swift Now Runs on Cursor, VSCodium, and Beyond

Swift developers can now write code in a wider array of popular IDEs, including Cursor, VSCodium, AWS Kiro, and Google Antigravity, thanks to the official Swift extension landing on the Open VSX Registry.

Swift Breaks IDE Barriers: Official Extension Now Available on Open VSX Registry
Source: swift.org

This vendor-neutral, open-source extension registry, hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, enables these editors to tap directly into Swift support without manual downloads.

How It Works

The Swift extension for VS Code—already available on the Visual Studio Marketplace—is now officially published on the Open VSX Registry. This allows any editor compatible with that registry to automatically discover and install the extension.

Leveraging VS Code extension compatibility, editors like Cursor and Antigravity can now automatically fetch Swift support, making setup seamless for developers.

"This milestone brings Swift support, including code completion, refactoring, full debugging support, a test explorer, as well as DocC support, to a broader ecosystem of compatible editors," said a Swift project spokesperson.

Background

Swift has long supported development across multiple IDEs, including VS Code, Xcode, Neovim, and Emacs, plus any editor that implements the Language Server Protocol (LSP).

Until now, however, the official Swift extension was only available on the Visual Studio Marketplace, limiting access for users of open-source editors that rely on the Open VSX Registry.

With this launch, Swift extends its reach to agentic IDEs—AI-powered development environments that automate workflows—such as Cursor and Google Antigravity.

What This Means

Developers can now enjoy first-class Swift support across platforms—macOS, Linux, and Windows—directly from their preferred editor without manual configuration.

The extension includes essential features: code completion, refactoring, full debugging, a test explorer, and DocC documentation support. This makes Swift a more attractive choice for cross-platform projects and AI-assisted development.

"Swift's growing ecosystem of editor support is particularly significant as Swift continues to show its versatility across platforms and development environments, including agentic IDEs," noted an industry analyst.

How to Get Started

For most Open VSX-compatible editors: Open the Extensions panel, search for 'Swift', and install the official extension.

For Cursor users: A dedicated guide—Setting up Cursor for Swift Development—walks through setup, features, and configuring custom Swift skills for AI workflows.

The extension is available immediately. The Swift team encourages developers to download it, try it in their editor of choice, and share feedback.

Key Facts at a Glance

  • Official Swift extension now on Open VSX Registry (Eclipse Foundation)
  • Compatible editors: Cursor, VSCodium, AWS Kiro, Google Antigravity, and others
  • Supports macOS, Linux, Windows
  • Features: code completion, refactoring, debugging, test explorer, DocC
  • No manual download required in agentic IDEs
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