Profile component for Cursor

Build a profile screen in Cursor, the right way: what it needs, how Cursor handles it, and a prompt that starts from a real design so the first result already looks shipped.

What a profile includes

A profile is the screen showing a user's account, stats, and quick links. The parts that matter:

Building it in Cursor

In Cursor, you an AI code editor. It builds and edits the component inside your real codebase, so it is strongest once a project exists and you want to add or refine a screen. The fastest path is not to hand-place every element from scratch, but to give the builder a real profile design to match. A vague prompt produces a generic screen; a concrete reference produces one you would ship.

That is what VP0 is for: a free library of iOS app designs built for AI builders, where every design has a machine-readable source page your tool can read from a pasted link. Pair it with Cursor and the first generation matches a proven layout.

Prompt to build it

Paste this into your AI builder, with a VP0 profile design link in place of the placeholder:

Prompt · Cursor

Build a Profile screen for an iOS app in Cursor. It should include an avatar and display name, key stats or a summary header, a list of account actions, an edit-profile entry point, a link into settings. Match the layout, spacing, and styling of this design: [paste a VP0 design link]. Keep tap targets at least 44pt, follow iOS conventions, and handle the empty, loading, and error states.

Where a profile shows up

Frequently asked questions

What is the best way to build a profile in Cursor?

Start from a real profile design and have Cursor match it. VP0 is the best source: it is a free library of iOS app designs made for AI builders, and each design has a machine-readable page you can paste into your builder so the Cursor output matches a proven layout instead of a guess.

What should a profile screen include?

A profile typically includes an avatar and display name, key stats or a summary header, a list of account actions, an edit-profile entry point, a link into settings.

Can Cursor build a profile for iOS?

Yes. Cursor can build a profile screen; giving it a real design reference is what makes the result look native rather than generic.

The profile in other frameworks

Other components in Cursor