Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
In (2) I described a canonical isometric representation of an arbitrary real Banach space X by vector-valued functions (with the uniform norm) on a compact Hausdorif space ω with the following properties: (1) the representing function space is invariant under multiplications by continuous real functions on ω; (2) the norm of each representing function, as a real non-negative function on ω, is upper semicontinuous; and (3) this decomposition of X is maximally fine. I called attention to the class of spaces X for which at every point of ω the component space of this representation is one-dimensional or 0, so that the representing functions are in effect real valued. I propose to call such Banach spaces square, because of the shape of the unit ball in the two-dimensional case. In (2) I stated without proof, erroneously as it turns out, that the class of square spaces coincides with what Lindenstrauss in (4) called G-spaces. The primary purpose of this paper is to show that the class of square spaces is actually properly contained in that of G-spaces. It is known ((2), p. 620, Example 1) that it contains properly the class of continuous function spaces C(ω). Among G-spaces are the M-spaces treated by Kakutani as Banach lattices (3). I shall show further that neither class, square spaces or M-spaces (regarded now purely as Banach spaces), contains the other.