--- title: Sections description: Organize content into sections. categories: [] keywords: [] aliases: [/content/sections/] --- ## Overview {{% glossary-term "section" %}} ```text content/ ├── articles/ <-- section (top-level directory) │ ├── 2022/ │ │ ├── article-1/ │ │ │ ├── cover.jpg │ │ │ └── index.md │ │ └── article-2.md │ └── 2023/ │ ├── article-3.md │ └── article-4.md ├── products/ <-- section (top-level directory) │ ├── product-1/ <-- section (has _index.md file) │ │ ├── benefits/ <-- section (has _index.md file) │ │ │ ├── _index.md │ │ │ ├── benefit-1.md │ │ │ └── benefit-2.md │ │ ├── features/ <-- section (has _index.md file) │ │ │ ├── _index.md │ │ │ ├── feature-1.md │ │ │ └── feature-2.md │ │ └── _index.md │ └── product-2/ <-- section (has _index.md file) │ ├── benefits/ <-- section (has _index.md file) │ │ ├── _index.md │ │ ├── benefit-1.md │ │ └── benefit-2.md │ ├── features/ <-- section (has _index.md file) │ │ ├── _index.md │ │ ├── feature-1.md │ │ └── feature-2.md │ └── _index.md ├── _index.md └── about.md ``` The example above has two top-level sections: articles and products. None of the directories under articles are sections, while all of the directories under products are sections. A section within a section is a known as a nested section or subsection. ## Explanation Sections and non-sections behave differently. ||Sections|Non-sections :--|:-:|:-: Directory names become URL segments|:heavy_check_mark:|:heavy_check_mark: Have logical ancestors and descendants|:heavy_check_mark:|:x: Have list pages|:heavy_check_mark:|:x: With the file structure from the [example above](#overview): 1. The list page for the articles section includes all articles, regardless of directory structure; none of the subdirectories are sections. 1. The articles/2022 and articles/2023 directories do not have list pages; they are not sections. 1. The list page for the products section, by default, includes product-1 and product-2, but not their descendant pages. To include descendant pages, use the `RegularPagesRecursive` method instead of the `Pages` method in the section template. 1. All directories in the products section have list pages; each directory is a section. ## Template selection Hugo has a defined [lookup order] to determine which template to use when rendering a page. The [lookup rules] consider the top-level section name; subsection names are not considered when selecting a template. With the file structure from the [example above](#overview): Content directory|Section template :--|:-- `content/products`|`layouts/products/section.html` `content/products/product-1`|`layouts/products/section.html` `content/products/product-1/benefits`|`layouts/products/section.html` Content directory|Page template :--|:-- `content/products`|`layouts/products/page.html` `content/products/product-1`|`layouts/products/page.html` `content/products/product-1/benefits`|`layouts/products/page.html` If you need to use a different template for a subsection, specify `type` and/or `layout` in front matter. ## Ancestors and descendants A section has one or more ancestors (including the home page), and zero or more descendants. With the file structure from the [example above](#overview): ```text content/products/product-1/benefits/benefit-1.md ``` The content file (benefit-1.md) has four ancestors: benefits, product-1, products, and the home page. This logical relationship allows us to use the `.Parent` and `.Ancestors` methods to traverse the site structure. For example, use the `.Ancestors` method to render breadcrumb navigation. ```go-html-template {file="layouts/_partials/breadcrumb.html"} ``` With this CSS: ```css .breadcrumb ol { padding-left: 0; } .breadcrumb li { display: inline; } .breadcrumb li:not(:last-child)::after { content: "»"; } ``` Hugo renders this, where each breadcrumb is a link to the corresponding page: ```text Home » Products » Product 1 » Benefits » Benefit 1 ``` [lookup order]: /templates/lookup-order/ [lookup rules]: /templates/lookup-order/#lookup-rules