# Built-in Objects Objects are passed into a template from the template engine. And your code can pass objects around (we'll see examples when we look at the `with` and `range` statements). There are even a few ways to create new objects within your templates, like with the `tuple` function we'll see later. Objects can be simple, and have just one value. Or they can contain other objects or functions. For example. the `Release` object contains several objects (like `Release.Name`) and the `Files` object has a few functions. In the previous section, we use `{{.Release.Name}}` to insert the name of a release into a template. `Release` is one of the top-level objects that you can access in your templates. - `Release`: This object describes the release itself. It has several objects inside of it: - `Release.Name`: The release name - `Release.Namespace`: The namespace to be released into (if the manifest doesn’t override) - `Release.IsUpgrade`: This is set to `true` if the current operation is an upgrade or rollback. - `Release.IsInstall`: This is set to `true` if the current operation is an install. - `Values`: Values passed into the template from the `values.yaml` file and from user-supplied files. By default, `Values` is empty. - `Chart`: The contents of the `Chart.yaml` file. Any data in `Chart.yaml` will be accessible here. For example `{{.Chart.Name}}-{{.Chart.Version}}` will print out the `mychart-0.1.0`. - The available fields are listed in the [Charts Guide](https://github.com/helm/helm/blob/master/docs/charts.md#the-chartyaml-file) - `Files`: This provides access to all non-special files in a chart. While you cannot use it to access templates, you can use it to access other files in the chart. See the section _Accessing Files_ for more. - `Files.Get` is a function for getting a file by name (`.Files.Get config.ini`) - `Files.GetBytes` is a function for getting the contents of a file as an array of bytes instead of as a string. This is useful for things like images. - `Capabilities`: This provides information about what capabilities the Kubernetes cluster supports. - `Capabilities.APIVersions` is a set of versions. - `Capabilities.APIVersions.Has $version` indicates whether a version (e.g., `batch/v1`) or resource (e.g., `apps/v1/Deployment`) is available on the cluster. - `Capabilities.Kube.Version` is the Kubernetes version. - `Capabilities.Kube` is a short form for Kubernetes version. - `Capabilities.Kube.Major` is the Kubernetes major version. - `Capabilities.Kube.Minor` is the Kubernetes minor version. - `Template`: Contains information about the current template that is being executed - `Name`: A namespaced filepath to the current template (e.g. `mychart/templates/mytemplate.yaml`) - `BasePath`: The namespaced path to the templates directory of the current chart (e.g. `mychart/templates`). The values are available to any top-level template. As we will see later, this does not necessarily mean that they will be available _everywhere_. The built-in values always begin with a capital letter. This is in keeping with Go's naming convention. When you create your own names, you are free to use a convention that suits your team. Some teams, like the [Kubernetes Charts](https://github.com/helm/charts) team, choose to use only initial lower case letters in order to distinguish local names from those built-in. In this guide, we follow that convention.