It depends on the effects of the other substituents on the aromatic ring. Some have a electron withdrawing effect on the aromatic ring (-NO
2, ammonium, phosphonium, carbonyls, sulfonates and cyanide) and then electrophilic substitution will normally occur in the meta position. If the substituent has an electron donating effect (like -OH, -NH
2, and alkyl groups) then electrophilic substitution will normally occur in the ortho and para positions. The halogens have a deactivating effect because of their electronegativity, but because of overlap of their orbitals with the aromatic system (not so much for the larger halogens) they are ortho and para directing.
Steric hinderance is also a factor, even adding a small Ac group to the N in phenylamine hinders electrophilic substitution at the ortho position.
I strongly suggest u read a text book as its way too long to explain here.
ressellm is right, the topic is quite long and a textbook would help a lot as you need diagrams etc.