Do you know fermat's last theorem?
By ninsensei
@ninsensei (232)
2 responses
@soulsister_16 (738)
• Switzerland
2 Aug 07
I haven't seen the exact proof (heard it was more than a hundred pages long).
I kinda know some bits about it though.
I hate proofs. ;p
@eloneth (13)
• Malaysia
14 Oct 07
Fermat's last theorem states that:
In the equation a^n + b^n = c^n, when n is an integer greater than two, there are no solutions where a, b and c are all integers (and not zero, duh).
Fermat scribbled this in his notebook: "I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of this, which this margin is too narrow to contain." Until now his version of the proof is unknown. It was only in 1994, 357 years after Fermat first proposed this theorem, that it was finally proven. The proof is like 90-100 pages long (can't remember), and... which this post is too narrow to contain.