On 05/04/2016 10:09 AM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
The '*' means "zero or more digits".  Don't forget that zero.
The first match is where there are zero digits, i.e. at the
beginning of the line.  So sed replaces it with "//" (nothing).

However, usually regexps are greedy so they match as much as possible, not the minimum. And somehow it does work when you use /g so it is matching more.

Try sed 's/[0-9]*/X/' to confirm.

You really want sed 's/[0-9][0-9]*//'  which reads a digit
followed by zero or more additional digits.

Or use + as has been mentioned elsewhere in this thread.
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