I would appreciate it if someone could explain the difference(s) between a $C^\infty$ and a $C^\omega$ surface embedded in $\mathbb{R}^3$. I ran across these terms in M. Berger's Geometry Revealed book (p.387). The context is: There are examples of two different $C^\infty$ compact surfaces that are isometric, but no known examples for "two real analytic (class $C^\omega$)" surfaces which are isometric. Thanks!
Clarification. Thanks to Mariano and Willie for trying to help---I appreciate that! It is difficult to be clear when you are confused :-). Let me try two more specific questions: (1) Where does the $\omega$ enter into the definition of $C^\omega$? Presumably $\omega$ is the first infinite ordinal. (2) What I'm really after is the geometric "shape differences" between $C^\infty$ and $C^\omega$. The non-analytic but smooth functions I know smoothly join, say, an exponential to a straight line, but geometrically they look just like smooth functions. I guess I don't understand what the constraints of real-analyticity imply geometrically. Maybe that's why this isometric question Berger mentioned is unsolved?!
Addendum. Here are Ryan's two functions:
Left: $C^\infty$ but not $C^\omega$. Right: $C^\omega$.