Why does String.replaceAll() work differently in Java 8 from Java 9?

Most likely due to JDK-6609854 and JDK-8189343 which reported negative nested character classes handling (in your example [^[0-9-]]). This behavior was fixed in 9 and 10, but fix was not backported to 8. The bug for Java 8 is explained as:

In Java, the negation does not apply to anything appearing in
nested [brackets]

So [^c] does not match “c”, as you would expect.

[^[c]] does match “c”. Not what I would expect.

[[^c]] does not match “c”

The same holds true for ranges or property expressions – if they’re
inside brackets, a negation at an out level does not affect them.

[^a-z] is opposite from [^[a-z]]

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