# IDEs Agênticos

Agentic IDEs are AI-native editors built around autonomous coding agents — they read your codebase, plan a change, edit across many files, run commands and tests, and iterate on the results alongside you. They go beyond autocomplete to complete whole tasks. Compare the leading options — Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, Cline, and more — ranked by the developers who ship with them daily.

What separates an agentic IDE from ordinary AI autocomplete is the loop: the agent forms a plan, makes multi-file edits, runs the project (build, tests, linters), reads the output, and corrects itself — repeating until the task is done or it hands back to you. Most expose controls for how much autonomy you grant, from suggest-and-approve to fully hands-off runs, plus context features like codebase indexing and rules files.

They come in different shapes: full editors (Cursor, Windsurf), terminal-native agents (Claude Code), editor extensions (Cline and others), and cloud agents that work from an issue or a branch. The best choice depends on your stack, how much control you want, and whether you prefer a local or cloud workflow. Open each entry to compare strengths, pricing, and the models it runs.

## Frequently asked questions

### What makes an IDE “agentic”?

An agentic IDE runs an autonomous agent that can read your codebase, plan changes, edit multiple files, and run commands — then check the results and iterate. It completes whole tasks rather than just suggesting the next line of code.

### How is an agentic IDE different from AI autocomplete?

Autocomplete predicts the next few lines as you type. An agentic IDE takes a goal, makes changes across the project, runs tests, and fixes what it broke — operating in a plan-act-observe loop instead of a single suggestion.

### Which agentic IDE should I choose?

It depends on your stack and how much autonomy you want. Prefer a familiar editor experience and you'll lean toward Cursor or Windsurf; prefer the terminal and you'll reach for Claude Code; want a free, open-source extension and Cline is worth a look. Browse the ranked list and open each entry to compare.

### Do agentic IDEs work with my language and framework?

Most are language-agnostic because they drive the same tools you do — your compiler, test runner, and shell. Coverage and quality vary by ecosystem, so check each entry for noted strengths.

### Are agentic IDEs free?

Some are free or open source (for example, Cline); others are paid or usage-based, often billing for model tokens. Open an entry for current pricing.

### Are agentic IDEs safe to let run commands?

They can run shell commands and edit files, so most offer approval modes and sandboxing. Start with approve-before-run on unfamiliar projects, work in version control, and increase autonomy as you build trust.

## Entries (ranked)

_None yet._

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