![]() ![]() If the system is already live, here are a few ways to remedy the situation. Of course, the above will only work for the developer. Firefox and Safari has a similar feature too. This is Google Chrome, but all Chromium-based browsers (Edge, Opera) should be the same. Go under the “application” tab > “storage” > “clear site data”.If you want to fully clean out all the site data – Yes, they don’t get “flushed” when you do a “regular force reload”. Or disable the cache entirely, then reload the page.įor the uninitiated, we have something called “persistent storage” in modern web development.Right-click on any file, clear the browser cache.Right-click on the reload button, and choose “empty cache and hard reload”.Īlternatively, open the network tab (might need to reload the page first). If the above hard reload somehow didn’t work, press F12 to bring up the developer’s console. But most other Chromium-based browsers should also have a similar feature. ![]() Now, the following is only for the Google Chrome browser. The “common shortcut key” to do force-reload is either CONTROL-F5 or CONTORL-SHIFT-R.That’s it, this will force a full page reload from the server, not use anything from the local cache. In most modern browsers – Hold the CONTROL key ( COMMAND on a Mac), then click on the reload button.All right, let us now get started with the ways to do a force reload within the browser itself first. ![]()
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