5 Integrations with T3 Code

View a list of T3 Code integrations and software that integrates with T3 Code below. Compare the best T3 Code integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with T3 Code. Here are the current T3 Code integrations in 2026:

  • 1
    OpenAI Codex
    Codex is an AI-powered coding agent from OpenAI designed to help developers build, manage, and ship software more efficiently across the entire development lifecycle. It acts as an intelligent pair programmer that can understand codebases, generate features, and deliver production-ready pull requests. Codex can safely execute commands in sandboxed environments while assisting with debugging, refactoring, and testing. A key advancement is its computer use capability, allowing it to operate your computer by seeing, clicking, and typing across applications. This enables Codex to interact with tools that don’t have APIs, making it useful for tasks like frontend testing and app navigation. The platform also includes an in-app browser and integrations with various developer tools for a more unified workflow. Codex supports automation by handling ongoing tasks such as monitoring, issue triage, and follow-ups.
    Starting Price: $20/month
  • 2
    Cursor

    Cursor

    Cursor

    Cursor is an advanced AI-powered IDE designed to make developers exponentially more productive. Built with deep codebase understanding and intelligent automation, it combines natural language interaction with precise, context-aware editing tools. Its Agent feature acts as a human-AI coding partner capable of planning and executing entire development workflows, while the Tab model delivers remarkably accurate autocompletion and targeted suggestions. Cursor seamlessly integrates across environments—from GitHub and Slack to the command line—ensuring AI assistance is available wherever you code. Supporting leading models like GPT-5, Claude Sonnet, Gemini Pro, and Grok Code, it gives developers full control over autonomy and model selection. Fast, intuitive, and built for serious builders, Cursor is redefining what an IDE can be.
    Starting Price: $20 per month
  • 3
    Claude Code

    Claude Code

    Anthropic

    Claude Code is an AI-powered coding agent designed to work directly inside your existing development environment. It goes beyond simple autocomplete by understanding entire codebases and helping developers build, debug, refactor, and ship features faster. Developers can interact with Claude Code from the terminal, IDEs, Slack, or the web, making it easy to stay in flow without switching tools. By describing tasks in natural language, users can let Claude handle code exploration, modifications, and explanations. Claude Code can analyze project structure, dependencies, and architecture to onboard developers quickly. It integrates with common command-line tools, version control systems, and testing workflows. This makes it a powerful companion for both individual developers and teams working on complex software projects.
    Starting Price: $20/month
  • 4
    OpenCode

    OpenCode

    Anomaly Innovations

    OpenCode is the AI coding agent purpose-built for the terminal. It delivers a responsive, themeable terminal UI that feels native while streamlining your workflow. With LSP auto-loading, it ensures the right language servers are always available for accurate, context-aware coding support. Developers can spin up multiple AI agents in parallel sessions on the same project, maximizing productivity. Shareable links make it easy to reference, debug, or collaborate across sessions. Supporting Claude Pro and 75+ LLM providers via Models.dev, OpenCode gives you full freedom to choose your coding companion.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    TypeScript

    TypeScript

    TypeScript

    TypeScript adds additional syntax to JavaScript to support a tighter integration with your editor. Catch errors early in your editor. TypeScript code converts to JavaScript, which runs anywhere JavaScript runs: In a browser, on Node.js or Deno and in your apps. TypeScript understands JavaScript and uses type inference to give you great tooling without additional code. TypeScript was used by 78% of the 2020 State of JS respondents, with 93% saying they would use it again. The most common kinds of errors that programmers write can be described as type errors: a certain kind of value was used where a different kind of value was expected. This could be due to simple typos, a failure to understand the API surface of a library, incorrect assumptions about runtime behavior, or other errors.
    Starting Price: Free
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