This is a very abstract question, I hope this is appropriate.
Suppose $T$ is some claim over some infinite set $A$, for example, let $A$ be the set of all loopless planar graphs, and $T$ be the claim "for every element $a \in A$, the chromatic number of $a$'s dual graph is $\leq 4$" (this is known as "Four-color Theorem"); or, let $A = \mathbb{N}$, and $T$ be the claim "there are no 3 elements $x, y, z \in A$ such that $x^5 + y^5 =z^5$" (a specific case of Fermat's last theorem).
In the first example, it is possible to prove the claim $T$ by testing some claim $T'$ over finite set $A' \subset A$, see proof by computer section. This is done by a series of reductions, showing that if all the elements in some finite set satisfy a property, then the (original) claim holds.
In some sense, mathematical induction is similar: we test a claim on finite set ("the base case"), then proving $a_n \rightarrow a_{n+1}$, which shows the claim is correct for all space.
Are there more known cases like that? i.e. proving (a combinatorial) claim by reduction to finite cases?