I'm using PyCharm, so the commit text inside of it saves from the last time you pushed a commit. I forgot to change the description of my new commit and accidentally pushed it without realizing that it was wrong. While not life-changing, this is certainly inconvenient and I'm not sure if there is an easy way to do this through GitHub. Help would be greatly appreciated!
Also, it's worthwhile to note that I have already moved on in my project, so the last commit is not the one with the mistake in it.
I tried looking around for any buttons in both PyCharm and GitHub, but could not find anything.
I forgot to change the description of my new commit and accidentally pushed it without realizing that it was wrong. [...] Also, it's worthwhile to note that I have already moved on in my project, so the last commit is not the one with the mistake in it.
Looks like a job for rebase
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I tried looking around for any buttons in both PyCharm and GitHub, but could not find anything.
Not surprised. Rebasing is too powerful a feature to work within the confines of any GUI that I've seen. It also can be a footgun for the uninitiated.
For this, you'll need to open a shell.
# We're going to replace some commits in this branch, and in order to do that,
# we first must switch to it.
git checkout <your branch>
# Note the "~" here -- it's necessary. It means "that commit ID, but the one
# before it"
git rebase -i <your commit id>~
# Then:
# 1. In the editor, change "pick" on the first line to "r" (reword)
# 2. Save-exit the file
# 3. The editor will immediately re-pop open with your commit message. Edit the
# commit message, then save-exit the file.
git rebase --continue
git push -f
This isn't recommended if you're part of a development team, but I've seen big open-source projects do it before.