Macworld The recently released 6.3 version of Apple’s Swift programming language features the official release of the Swift SDK for Android, which means that developers can now use Swift to write Android applications. Back in October 2025, Apple initially announced the SDK for Android and released a preview version. A Getting Started guide is available, along with examples, a project board for tracking tracking status, and a vision document. For the general user, Apple’s support for Android may seem odd, but it actually makes a lot of sense. Many developers create their apps for iOS first, and the new SDK (Software Development Kit) makes it easier to bring their software over–most Android apps are written in Kotlin or Java. When apps are written using the same SDK, it also makes it easier for feature parity between the two platforms. Developers who already have existing Kotlin or Java Android apps can use Swift Java and Swift Java JNI Core to integrate Swift c
UPVOTERS
Community appreciation
See who found this content valuable and showed their support.
No upvotes yet.
Be the first to show your appreciation for this content.
TOPICS
Explore the same topics
Discover more content from the topics this post is mapped to.
Keep browsing
Explore more from this topic
Dive into the full feed of curated posts covering this category.
Discussion
Don’t hold back—comment!
Don’t wait—start sharing your ideas now!