If F is a continuous function on the real line and f=F′ is its
distributional derivative then the continuous primitive integral of
distribution f is ∫abf=F(b)−F(a). This integral contains the Lebesgue,
Henstock--Kurzweil and wide Denjoy integrals. Under the Alexiewicz norm the
space of integrable distributions is a Banach space. We define the convolution
f\ast g(x)=\intinf f(x-y)g(y) dy for f an integrable distribution and g a
function of bounded variation or an L1 function. Usual properties of
convolutions are shown to hold: commutativity, associativity, commutation with
translation. For g of bounded variation, f∗g is uniformly continuous
and we have the estimate \|f\ast g\|_\infty\leq \|f\|\|g\|_\bv where
∥f∥=supI∣∫If∣ is the Alexiewicz norm. This supremum is taken over all
intervals I⊂R. When g∈L1 the estimate is ∥f∗g∥≤∥f∥∥g∥1. There are results on differentiation and integration of
convolutions. A type of Fubini theorem is proved for the continuous primitive
integral