Let $f: \Bbb C \to \Bbb C$ be an entire (analytic on the whole plane) function such that exists $\omega_1,\omega_2 \in \mathbb{S}^1$, linearly independent over $\Bbb R$ such that: $$f(z+\omega_1)=f(z)=f(z+\omega_2), \quad \forall\,z\in \Bbb C.$$Prove that $f$ is constant.
The intuition seems clear to me, we have the three vertices of a triangle given by $0$, $\omega_1$ and $\omega_2$. All points in the plane are one of the vertices of that triangle under a suitable parallel translation. The constant value will be $f(0)$, fine. Throwing values for $z$ there, I have found that $$f(n\omega_1) = f(\omega_1) = f(0)=f(\omega_2) = f(n\omega_2), \quad \forall\, n \in \Bbb Z.$$
I don't know how to improve the above for, say, rationals (at least). Some another ideas would be:
Checking that $f' \equiv 0$. I don't have a clue of how to do that.
Write $w = a\omega_1+b\omega_2$, with $a,b \in \Bbb R$, do stuff and conclude that $f(w) = f(0)$. This approach doesn't seem good, because I only have a weak result with integers above.
Finding that $f$ coincides with $f(0)$ on a set with an accumulation point. This seems also bad: the set on with $f$ coincides with $f(0)$ by which I found above is discrete.
Nothing works and this is getting annoying... And I don't see how analyticity comes in there. I'll be very thankful if someone can give me an idea.
(On a side note.. I know that this title is not informative at all. Feel free to edit if you come up with something better.)