Some of the things you say suggest that you're confused about really basic things.
xitoa said:
1) i think i could say that W is linearly dependent? since \lambda1 + \lambda2 + ... + \lambdan = 0 \in C
One doesn't say that a subspace is "linearly dependent". A list of vectors (finite list, when doing finite-dimensional linear algebra, which you are) is "linearly independent" or "linearly dependent". In any case, the fact that the equation defining W is "the sum of the coordinates is zero" has nothing to do with any kind of linear dependence property; a list of vectors is linearly dependent when there is a
linear combination of vectors in the list that comes out to the zero
vector.
In any case this has nothing to do with your problem.
[According to the definitions,
every nontrivial subspace of a vector space is a "linearly dependent set" of vectors; that's why this isn't useful and we don't say it.]
xitoa said:
2) I'm not quite sure about what it means that 1=e1 + ... + en
Does it mean that each en is something like <1,0,0...,0>, <0,1,0,...,0>, etc?
\mathbf{\mathrm{e}}_j is
conventionally defined to be the vector with a 1 in the jth place and 0 elsewhere. This equation is meant to tell you what \mathbf{1} is (that it's the vector with 1 in every coordinate), not what the \mathbf{\mathrm{e}}_j are.
xitoa said:
3) Also, I am still foggy on how direct sums work...say: two subspaces U and W exist in V(that are out of the context of this problem).
U and Ware a direct sum if (is it iff?)
1. U\capW = {0} (zero vector)
2. U+W=V
So, if they satisfy those two conditions, its a direct sum?
Yes, this is a correct definition for "V is the (internal) direct sum of U and W."
xitoa said:
4) To help prove that V is a direct sum, could I say that Cn is the zero vector?
This makes no sense whatsoever. \mathbb{C}^n is the vector space in which all of this problem takes place. It is an n-dimensional complex vector space and there is no way in which you can "say that it is the zero vector".
You need to prove two things, taken from the definition you quote in your third point:
(a) that \mathbb{C}\mathbf{1} \cap W = \{0\}, and
(b) that \mathbb{C}\mathbf{1} + W = \mathbb{C}^n. This second point means to prove that every vector of \mathbb{C}^n can be expressed as the sum of a vector in \mathbb{C}\mathbf{1} and a vector in W.