All that extra stuff doesn't matter. What does matter use the letters immediately following the part number. In this case, the version of the ubiquitous TL072 that you are looking for is TL072C. If you download the TI datasheet for TL072, and look at the Electrical Characteristics section, you will find different specifications for the different variations: TL072C, TL072AC, TL072BC, TL072M, and others. The TL072H is actually manufactured differently as it is a higher voltage device, but the other "versions" are likely all manufactured identically. The difference is in testing of the finished devices done by TI. They test various parameters like input offset voltage, and bin the devices based on how well they test. Only the better ones might meet the better specs of the TL072AC version, so they are marked as such and sold at a premium price. Others which meet the TL072BC specs are marked and sold as such. The TL072C is a lower spec part so they are sold cheaper. Any one may be just as good as any random TL072AC marked part, but maybe not; the guarantee is that it at least meets the specs in the datasheet.
So if you want an "exact" replacement, buy a TI branded TL072C from a reputable source (Digikey, Mouser, etc., But not eBay, Ali, or Amazon). The AC and BC are acceptable too as they are maybe even "better". But you can't replace an (e.g.) AC part with a lower spec C part and blindly trust that it will be good enough. It will likely be fine most of the time, but not if the circuit depends on a tight spec like low input offset, and you happen to get one which falls at the bad end of that spec.