It is easy to completely characterize the solutions of such (affine) linear equations.
Lemma $\ $ If $\ a\color{#0a0}{b_0}=c\ $ then $\ ab=c\iff b = \color{#0a0}{b_0}+\color{#c00}z\,$ for some root $\,\color{#c00}z\,$ of $\,a\color{#c00}z = 0$
Proof $\ \ (\Rightarrow)\ \ \ ab=c = ab_0\ $ so $\ 0 = a(b-b_0) =: a\color{#c00}z$
$(\Leftarrow)\ \ \ ab = a(\color{#0a0}{b_0}+\color{#c00}z) = a\color{#0a0}{b_0} + a\color{#c00}z = c + 0 = c$
Remark $ $ This result may be familiar from the study of linear differential or difference equations (recurrences), which shows the general solution of such inhomogeneous equations has the form of a fixed $\rm\color{#0a0}{particular}$ solution $\,\color{#0a0}{b_9}$ added to the general solution $\,\color{#c00}b\,$ of the associated homogeneous equation, as in the above solution $\,\color{#0a0}{b_0} +\color{#c00} z\,\,$ where $\,x =\color{#0a0}{ b_0}\,$ is a particular solution of $\,ax = c\,$ and where $\,x = \color{#c00}z\,$ denotes the general solution of the associated $\,\rm\color{darkorange}{homogeneous}\,$ equation: $\ ax = \color{darkorange}0.\,$
These results are all special cases of the above Lemma on the structure of the solution space of such inhomogeneous (affine) linear equations. The algebraic essence of the matter will be clarified upon studying linear algebra and module theory (= linear algebra with coefficient algebra a ring vs. field).