Since decades, mathematicians are studying function spaces, discovering new structures more and more adapted for a general theory of functional analysis.
In that works, sequence spaces are generally seen as a very simple example of "function" spaces. They become interesting in approximation theory (for instance to obtain some interesting characterization of Besov spaces using wavelet theory), being isomorphic to some important function spaces.
However, I was unable to find a good reference discussing important questions of functional analysis for the special case of sequence spaces, and discussing the particularity of this "simple" case, actually the simpler in infinite dimension.
I precise a bit my request with the kind of topics I am interested in.
- Definition of interesting sequence spaces: $\mathcal{l}_p$ and weighted-$\mathcal{l}_p$ spaces, the nuclear space $s$ of rapidly decreasing sequences and its dual, the space of slowly increasing functions, etc. Embeddings between such spaces.
- Theory of operators (infinite matrices) from $s$ to $s'$, for which Schwartz' kernel theorem applies. General study of the inversion of such operators.
- Measure theory on $s'$, where the Minlos-Bochner theorem applies. What can we measure on sequences? Then, application to a general theory of random sequences.
Do you know a book that deals with this kind of problems, in the most complete possible manner?
NB. I know that some mathematicians were studying the question of the nuclearity of sequences spaces in the 60's and 70's but I didn't find any systematic treatment focused on sequence spaces.