--- title: Introducing Multi-part Posts with Nested Routing date: '2021-05-02' tags: ['multi-author', 'next-js', 'feature'] draft: false summary: 'The blog template supports posts in nested sub-folders. This can be used to group posts of similar content e.g. a multi-part course. This post is itself an example of a nested route!' --- # Nested Routes The blog template supports posts in nested sub-folders. This helps in organisation and can be used to group posts of similar content e.g. a multi-part series. This post is itself an example of a nested route! It's located in the `/data/blog/nested-route` folder. ## How Simplify create multiple folders inside the main `/data/blog` folder and add your `.md`/`.mdx` files to them. You can even create something like `/data/blog/nested-route/deeply-nested-route/my-post.md` We use Next.js catch all routes to handle the routing and path creations. ## Use Cases Here are some reasons to use nested routes - More logical content organisation (blogs will still be displayed based on the created date) - Multi-part posts - Different sub-routes for each author - Internationalization (though it would be recommended to use [Next.js built-in i8n routing](https://nextjs.org/docs/advanced-features/i18n-routing)) ## Note - The previous/next post links at bottom of the template are currently sorted by date. One could explore modifying the template to refer the reader to the previous/next post in the series, rather than by date.