The Google Chrome is currently working on a mode which allows you to edit the passwords you have saved in the browser.
Currently, when a user saves their login credentials in the browser, the only way to edit them is through Google Online Password Management at https://passwords.google.com/.
If you want to change one code access directly from the Chrome mobile or desktop browser, you will need to delete your saved credentials and then log back into the site of interest with the new password.
This method is of course not the best.
Password editing comes in Google Chrome
This feature was originally requested in 2014 but was rejected.
At the end of 2018, when Google made Chrome password settings more accessible and visible to users, began to focus more on the implementation of this function.
The good news is that this feature is almost complete and users can start testing from the beta versions of Chrome.
To enable password editing in Google Chrome, follow these steps:
Download Chrome Beta for desktop computers or Chrome Beta for Android.
After installation, copy and paste the internal URL into the address bar
chrome: // flags / # edit-passwords-in-settings and press enter.
Change the "Edit passwords in settings" flag to "On" and Restart your browser when prompted.
After restarting your browser, open the internal address chrome :/ / settings / passwords, click on the menu with the three vertical dots next to the saved code. Select "Edit Password".
There are still a few bugs that Google developers are working out before the new feature goes live and rolls out to everyone when Chrome 86 moves to Stable issue next week.