I am reading a very simple proof that symplectic manifolds are even dimensional. The definition I was given is:
A smooth manifold $M$ is a symplectic manifold if it has a closed, non-degenerate 2-form $\omega$.
So now, the non-degeneracy assumption implies that $M$ is even dimensional. And this is because at every $m\in M$, the components of $\omega$ at any local chart represent an $n\times n$ skewsymmetric matrix $W$. Now the non-degeneracy assumption implies $\det(W)\neq 0$ and since $W^T = -W $, we have that $\det(W)=\det(W^T)=(-1)^n \det(W)$, therefore $n$ must be even.
The part that I don't get is how can we see the components of $\omega$ as an $n\times n$ matrix. Since $\omega$ is a section of $\Lambda^2(M)\rightarrow M$, I understand that at a point $m$, $\omega(m)$ is in $\Lambda^2(T_m M)\subset T^*_m M\otimes_{\mathbb{R}}T^*_m M$. Wouldn't this mean that I plug two $n$-dimensional vectors and I get a scalar?
I am still struggling trying to understand the objects so any help would be greatly appreciated.
Like you say, a symplectic form is in particular a bilinear form (on each tangent space). Given a bilinear form $g \colon V \times V \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ on a finite dimensional real vector space and a choice $\beta =(v_1,\dots,v_n)$ of basis for $V$, we say that the matrix $G = (g_{ij})$ whose entries are $g_{ij} := g(v_i,v_j)$ is the matrix representing $g$ with respect to the basis $\beta$. If $g$ is symmetric/skew-symmetric, the matrix $G$ will also be symmetric/skew-symmetric.
In your case, the meaning of the sentence "the components of $\omega$ at any local chart" is: