Now I've changed to using Git Bash as my default terminal, and the command above fails because the relative file path is passed as a Windows path with backslashes, and Git Bash can't parse that: $ streamlit run visuals\streamlit\time_plot.py This has worked fine thus far while I have been using the standard command prompt on a Windows machine. "description": "Streamlit run active file in active terminal", I have the Multi-command extension installed on VS Code and use it to launch Streamlit apps using this configuration in settings.json which is run via a keyboard shortcut: "mands": [ Isn't there a way to delete the above mentioned heroku/master branch (which is actually just a duplicate of the heroku/main) without removing the complete remote? (Now I am going to figure out how to work with the heroku remote again in the command line) But I wonder Now I don't see the remote on the command line anymore ((HEAD -> main))īut interestingly the app is still available online and in the heroku dashboard. To delete the heroku/master I've tried the following (which didn't work): git branch -d heroku/masterįinally I've removed the complete remote using git remote rm heroku That's why I have two different remote branches now ( heroku/main and heroku/master): (HEAD -> main, heroku/master, heroku/main) I just wanted to switch from master to main.īefore I've unfortunately done: git push heroku master Currently I develop a Django application, which I've deployed on Heroku.
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