Fermat's proof may have been a hoax, but you may want to look up one "Andrew Wiles".
Bottom line: you won't find any numbers.
2007-10-08 23:08:03
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answer #1
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answered by Edgar Greenberg 5
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Fermat's Last Theorem states that there are NO solutions to this equation where all the numbers are non-zero integers.
And in recent years it was indeed proven as a theorem; it's not a conjecture.
Though I suppose if you want to give a non-integer solution (which again is not what the theorem is about), you could always do something like 1, 1, 2^(1/3) and n = 3.
2007-10-09 06:07:16
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The whole point of Fermat's Last Theorem is that for non-zero integers x, y, and z , and for integer n, there are no solutions for the equation
x^n + y^n = z^n
when n > 2.
2007-10-09 06:09:28
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answer #3
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answered by Northstar 7
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they say fermat's proof was just a hoax. i don't know. go see for yourself.
2007-10-09 06:03:40
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answer #4
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answered by qwerty 3
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