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"How to Use Cursor in 2026: The AI Code Editor That Ships Faster"

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Cursor is a code editor built on VS Code with AI woven through every action. This guide gets you from install to shipping a feature with AI help, without losing control of your code.

Steps#

1. Install and open your repo#

Download Cursor, open your project folder. Your VS Code settings and extensions carry over since it is a fork.

2. Use Tab for autocomplete#

Cursor predicts multi-line edits across files. Accept with Tab, reject with Esc. It learns from your recent edits.

3. Try Cmd-K for inline edits#

Select code, press Cmd-K, and describe the change (‘rename this to snake_case’, ‘add input validation’). It edits in place.

4. Open Chat for questions#

Ask about the codebase (‘where is auth handled?’). Cursor reads your files to answer with file:line references.

5. Use Composer for multi-file features#

Describe a feature; Composer plans and applies changes across several files, showing a diff you accept or reject per file.

6. Add rules and context#

Drop a .cursorrules file with conventions so suggestions match your style; pin key files as context for big tasks.

Tips#

  • Never accept a diff you have not read
  • Keep Composer changes small and review often
  • Use Cursor as a pair programmer, not an autopilot
  • Commit before a large AI refactor so you can revert

FAQ#

Q: Is Cursor free?

There is a free Hobby tier with limits; Pro unlocks more model usage.

Q: Does it replace a developer?

No — it speeds up writing and navigation; architecture and review stay human.

Q: Can it edit many files at once?

Yes, Composer coordinates changes across files with a reviewable diff.

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