Comment by dwaite
6 years ago
https://dev.azure.com/compnerd/windows-swift
"Support" is the kicker - I consider C# and C++ to have Windows Support because the platform vendor publishes and provides support for their own developer tools.
Do you mean that, or maybe something closer to the level of "Support" where interested parties submit improvements, and platforms are included in the CI/CD process?
> Windows Support because the platform vendor publishes and provides support for their own developer tools.
It's not from Microsoft directly, but it's worth noting that LSP support for Swift is under active development. VSCode is probably currently the second-best IDE for Swift development.