Short answer: yes.
Longer answer: It's complicated at times.
As others have weighed in, dating with children is a scheduling issue, particularly in the early stages. You will want to keep a love interest separate from your children for a significant period of time. No kid needs to see a dating revolving door. So that requires some scheduling finesse (It can be done--it takes some effort). But you're playing the long game, and this is the best for your kids.
Secondly, I highly, HIGHLY recommend that you limit dating to people who have youngest children AROUND the same age as your youngest (within 2 years, I think works best).
Why?
Because if there is a significant age difference between your youngest children and theirs, there may be issues with expectations around what happens when children go to college, or who are able to drive. You would hate to invest 5 or so years into a relationship to someone and then realize that you are looking at perhaps 5-7 more years of parenting than you initially anticipated. Not that I don't love children (I do), but it's easy to forget that they would be tied to their younger kids while you would be more free. THAT can cause conflict (not always, but it's good to realize that starting out).
I once dated a man whose only child was a good 7-8 years younger than my youngest. It wouldn't have worked for MANY reasons (the largest was he wasn't a terribly great dad), but the age gap wouldn't have worked for ME. I wanted to have some freedom once my children went off to college, and that wouldn't have been possible had I been in a committed relationship or marriage with this person. That, coupled with a complicated ex situation (she was mentally ill--as in really, really ill with weeks-long hospitalizations) and his shitty parenting showed me I didn't need those headaches and that there were healthier people to date.
My ex's AP had very young children when we split (why a woman with 2 children under the age of 5 was flouncing in and out of hotel rooms with a married man causes one pause) and one of the most heartbreaking and difficult things I had to deal with was that they both viewed my daughters (11 and 14 at the split) as in-house child care. It caused some significant conflict for them.
My SO of 10 years now has 4 children (I have two) and his youngest two are within a year of my youngest two. Even though his youngest may move back home in the next month or so, we've had a long enough time that we can work through this. If it happens, it will be temporary and it's not like having a 13-year-old at home when the youngest goes off to college.
I really recommend you look at this as you get to know other single parents. I also recommend you keep your personal life as far from your parenting life as possible for quite some time. It will be difficult, but you'll be glad you did.
Cat