--- title: collections.After linkTitle: after description: Slices an array to the items after the Nth item. categories: [functions] keywords: [] menu: docs: parent: functions function: aliases: [after] returnType: any signatures: [collections.After INDEX COLLECTION] relatedFunctions: - collections.After - collections.First - collections.Last aliases: [/functions/after] --- The following shows `after` being used in conjunction with the [`slice`]function: ```go-html-template {{ $data := slice "one" "two" "three" "four" }} {{ range after 2 $data }} {{ . }} {{ end }} → ["three", "four"] ``` ## Example of `after` with `first`: 2nd–4th most recent articles You can use `after` in combination with the [`first`] function and Hugo's [powerful sorting methods][lists]. Let's assume you have a list page at `example.com/articles`. You have 10 articles, but you want your templating for the [list/section page] to show only two rows: 1. The top row is titled "Featured" and shows only the most recently published article (i.e. by `publishdate` in the content files' front matter). 2. The second row is titled "Recent Articles" and shows only the 2nd- to 4th-most recently published articles. {{< code file="layouts/section/articles.html" >}} {{ define "main" }}

Featured Article

{{ range first 1 .Pages.ByPublishDate.Reverse }}

{{ .Title }}

{{ .Description }}

{{ end }}

Recent Articles

{{ range first 3 (after 1 .Pages.ByPublishDate.Reverse) }}

{{ .Title }}

{{ .Description }}

{{ end }}
{{ end }} {{< /code >}} [`first`]: /functions/collections/first [list/section page]: /templates/section-templates [lists]: /templates/lists/#order-content [`slice`]: /functions/collections/slice/