Dictate in Cursor — AI Prompts, Docs, Comments, Commit Messages
Use SuperSpeech inside Cursor for agent prompts, markdown docs, code comments, commit messages, and long explanations. No extension required.
Cursor users still spend a large part of the day writing English, not just code. You write prompts, architecture notes, code comments, commit messages, README updates, and debugging explanations. SuperSpeech dictates into Cursor anywhere there is a text field, which makes it especially useful for AI-first coding workflows where speed of thought matters more than typing speed.
Where dictation helps most in Cursor
The strongest Cursor surfaces for SuperSpeech are prose-heavy, not syntax-heavy:
- Chat and agent prompts
- Markdown docs and ADRs
- Code comments and docstrings
- Commit messages
- Scratch notes during debugging
- PR summaries you draft before pasting elsewhere
Best Cursor workflows
Teams usually get the most value from dictation in these cases:
- Explaining intent to the AI agent in full sentences instead of fragments
- Drafting longer code review notes and implementation plans
- Writing README or migration notes after a refactor
- Summarizing debugging findings while the context is fresh
Custom dictionary for codebases
Cursor users deal with project-specific terms generic dictation gets wrong: repository names, internal services, CLI commands, package names, environment variables, and acronyms. SuperSpeech lets you map spoken phrases to exact output so your prompts and docs stay technically correct.
What not to dictate
SuperSpeech is excellent for prose in Cursor and okay for short identifiers or simple commands. It is not the ideal tool for dictating long raw code with brackets, punctuation, and exact syntax. The best workflow is: dictate the explanation, comment, or prompt, then type the precise code yourself or let Cursor generate it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does it work in Cursor chat?
Yes. Cursor chat and agent prompt fields accept SuperSpeech dictation like any other text input.
Should I dictate code directly?
Usually not long code. Dictation shines for prompts, plans, explanations, comments, and docs. For syntax-heavy code, keyboard plus AI generation is usually faster.
Can I dictate commit messages in Cursor?
Yes. SuperSpeech is very good for commit messages because punctuation and capitalization are handled automatically.
Does it help with technical vocabulary?
Yes. That is one of the strongest use cases. Add repository names, commands, acronyms, and product terms to the custom dictionary.
Do I need a Cursor extension?
No. SuperSpeech works at the system input layer, so Cursor sees it as typing.
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