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Let $x$ , $y$ , $z$ be positive real numbers.
For each positive integer $r$ , let
$a_r = (x^r+y^r)/r!$ and $b_r=z^r/r!$ .
For $s$ divisible by 4, let
$A_s=a_2-a_4+a_6- \cdots +a_{s-2}-a_s$ ,
$B_s=b_2-b_4+b_6- \cdots +b_{s-2}-b_s$ .
Then Fermat's last theorem is equivalent (by elementary means) to:
Theorem If $a_n=b_n$ for some odd integer $n>2$ , then either
(i) $A_N > 0$ for some $N>x,y$ ,
or
(ii) $B_M>0$ for some $M>z$ .
For a proof that these theorems are equivalent see:
proof of equivalence of Fermat's Last Theorem to its analytic form
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