I realise this is an old question but I'll answer it in case anyone else is trying to figure it out. A solution to this is to create areas that use a different routing value at a lower level than area, so for example your RouteConfig would look something like this:
public class RouteConfig
{
/// <summary>
/// A function that registers the default navigation route.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="routes">The RouteCollection to act on.</param>
public static void RegisterRoutes(RouteCollection routes)
{
routes.IgnoreRoute("{resource}.axd/{*pathInfo}");
var route = routes.MapRoute(
name: "Default",
url: "{area}/{subArea}/{controller}/{action}/{id}",
defaults: new { area = "DefaultArea", controller = "Home", action = "Splash", id = UrlParameter.Optional, section = "Customer" },
namespaces: new string[] { "Application.Controllers" });
}
}
And one of your sub-area registrations might look like this:
public class ApplicationSubAreaRegistration : AreaRegistration
{
public override string AreaName
{
get
{
return "ApplicationSubArea";
}
}
public override void RegisterArea(AreaRegistrationContext context)
{
context.MapRoute(
"SubArea_default",
"Area/SubArea/{controller}/{action}/{id}",
new { action = "Index", id = UrlParameter.Optional },
new string[] { "Application.Areas.AreaName.SubAreaName.Controllers" }
);
}
}
After reading that, does "area" still look like a word? Because it doesn't to me.
P.S. You can do this recursively as many times as you like (theoretically) such that for example you could do
url: "{area}/{subArea}/{subSubArea}/{subSubSubArea}/{evenMoreSubArea}/{controller}/{action}/{id}",
in your RouteConfig.cs and
"Area/SubArea/SubSubArea/SubSubSubArea/EvenMoreSubArea/{controller}/{action}/{id}",
in your area registration.
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