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sympy's solve() command for equations != 0

As i've read in the sympy docs, the solve() command expects an equation to solve as being equal to zero.
As the equations i would like to solve are not in that form and in fact solving them for 0 is my purpose in using a library like sympy, is there a way to get around this?

question from:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65661876/can-you-set-equations-in-sympy-equal-to-something-other-than-0

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What the docs are saying is that if you do something like

>>> solve(x**2 - 1, x)

Then solve is implicitly assuming that x**2 - 1 is equal to 0. If you wanted to solve x**2 - 1 = 2, then you could either subtract 2 from both sides, to get

>>> solve(x**2 - 1 - 2, x)

or you could use the Eq() class

>>> solve(Eq(x**2 - 1, 2), x)

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