I am trying to use \d in regex in sed but it doesn't work:
sed -re 's/\d+//g'
But this is working:
sed -re 's/[0-9]+//g'
I am trying to use \d in regex in sed but it doesn't work:
sed -re 's/\d+//g'
But this is working:
sed -re 's/[0-9]+//g'
 
    
     
    
    \d is a switch not a regular expression macro. If you want to use some predefined "constant" instead of [0-9] expression just try run this code:
s/[[:digit:]]+//g
 
    
     
    
    There is no such special character group in sed. You will have to use [0-9].
In GNU sed, \d introduces a decimal character code of one to three digits in the range 0-255. 
As indicated in this comment.
 
    
     
    
    You'd better use the Extended pattern in sed by adding -E.
In basic RegExp, \d and some others won't be detected
 -E      Interpret regular expressions as extended (modern) regular expressions rather than basic regular expressions (BRE's).  The re_format(7) manual page fully describes both formats.
