5/5 rating based on 833 reviews. Read all reviews for Microsoft SwiftKey AI Keyboard for iPhone.
Microsoft SwiftKey AI Keyboard is free iOS app published by TouchType Ltd
TheAriane
This app is by far one of the best keyboard apps I have ever tried. There is virtually no lag at all when you switch between keyboards, and the different themes makes it even more great. The only thing I would add though is being able to use 3D Touch on it. The 3D Touch ability on the regular Apple keyboard is became a vital component for me to use it with ease, so it would be great if it were made available on this app.
AImas1
The swiping concept is great-- it was my favorite part about the Droid. But the execution is terrible. The autocorrects very frequently predict the wrong word, and continue to "correct" to this incorrect word after being manually corrected. The same thing happens with certain punctuation (quotation marks are automatically pushed to the previous word and won't undo). This has made this keyboard app less efficient than the native keyboard. I've finally deleted out of frustration.
RoboElvis
I wanted to like this, but it caused more annoyance than helpfulness. Words were often wrong and I could rarely use the one handed typing. I like that it would keep my made up nonsense words!
mercury falling
If you enjoy reading eighteenth-century texts with random words capitalized here and there for no apparent reason, then this keyboard is for you. Things it insists MUST start with caps: Plaza, Cologne, Hahaha, Goodnight... you get the idea. If there were a way to manually edit its dictionary, this could be easily fixed, but there isn't. It can be stubbornly persistent about accepting overrides to its autocorrect; at times I have to back the cursor up and manually edit characters to force the word I want. It would be nice if the predictive text could be a little more human; often the words it chooses as most likely make zero sense in the composed sentence. Some words it just. will. not. even. For example, trying to type "yesterday" most often results in either "tartrate," "tartar," "yardage," or "yesteryear" being substituted. Because these are words most people use more than "yesterday." "Should" produces "spotless" or "spotlight." "Probably" gets you "poetically." "Unless" gives you "United." You get the idea. I sometimes suspect its dictionary must involve crowdsourcing because it suggests combinations that I have never ever typed together (apart from this review). Like LG (Chocolate), Tony (Stewart), Jeff (Gordon), etc. Again, because there is no way to edit the dictionary, there is no way to turn this off. All that being said, it's (usually) faster than the standard predictive keyboard, unless you're up against a word it doesn't like, or don't particularly want to capitalize your laughter.
awijasa
I tried Swype, GBoard, and Word Flow, but keep coming back to SwiftKey
Crazy Krishna
Nice interesting swipe way to write mails and get things done faster that is key...
MonsterRayn
The only thing it lacks is having both an easy way to get to emojis and the globe for switching. Maybe holding down the 123 thing could bring that up. Force touch for the space bar to move the cursor would be great.