.. include:: /Includes.rst.txt .. _configure_headertitle: HEADERTITLE mark ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The mark HEADERTITLE should output something like a "site title". It is the title of your whole website. So what we want to output there basically are only a few words of text. You already know how that is working; you removed such a definition when we started with the :code:`TEMPLATE` object. There was a :code:`TEXT` object, do you remember? This is how we can use a :code:`TEXT` object to output our site title there: .. code-block:: typoscript HEADERTITLE = TEXT HEADERTITLE.value = TYPO3 This is all it takes to put our header title in place. By the way, this is the easiest way to output a string with a content object. Have you noted that we just have defined a mark (and not a subpart)? Check that you have put the definition into :code:`page.10.marks`, not into :code:`page.10.subparts`! Here is the same code within the context of comments, so that you can see more clearly where it belongs: .. code-block:: typoscript //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // // Configuration of MARKS // //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// # Define the marks inside the subpart DOCUMENT page.10.marks { //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // // Mark HEADERTITLE // //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// # The mark HEADERTITLE outputs the site title HEADERTITLE = TEXT HEADERTITLE.value = TYPO3 } .. note:: By the way, the order in which you define the marks and the subparts inside :code:`page.10.marks` and :code:`page.10.subparts` basically does not matter, except if you use copies of objects. The original object must be defined before it is copied.