Question

Actually I am trying to move some box alternatively with in another box. I made it work, but both the blocks do not interrupt each other. What should I do? How can I make the blocks cross each other? I try using style:position, but it is not working.

Here is the code I have been using:

<marquee direction="down" behavior="alternate" scrollAmount=10 style="border:2px solid blue;">
  <marquee behavior="alternate" scrollAmount=50 >
    <img src="img1.JPG">
  </marquee>
  <marquee behavior="alternate" scrollAmount=10 >
    <img src="img1.JPG">
  </marquee>
</marquee>

What am I doing wrong?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Oh, dear Lord!

Well. They don't cross because they're positioned statically one above the other. The second marquee cannot go above the first.

You can solve* this problem by ungluing the marquees from each other using absolute positioning. Then doubly-nest each one with different horizontal and vertical motion:

<div style="border:2px solid blue; position: relative;">
    <marquee direction="down" behavior="alternate" scrollAmount="10">
        <marquee behavior="alternate" scrollAmount="50"><img src="img1.jpeg" alt="oh no" /></marquee>
    </marquee>
    <marquee direction="down" behavior="alternate" scrollAmount="20" style="position: absolute; top: 0;">
        <marquee behavior="alternate" scrollAmount="10"><img src="img1.jpeg" alt="help meee" /></marquee>
    </marquee>
</div>

*: for values 'x' of 'solve' where x='make a hideous mess of'.

This is for illustration purposes only. Please don't use this.

OTHER TIPS

Please don't use the marquee tag, it's non-standard and deprecated. Use some JavaScript library like jQuery UI for any kind of animation.

Use a JavaScript library or if not use JavaScript's settimeout plus absolute positioning & dhmtl.

I once had an email (a javascript-less environment) from a company trying to sell me something or other. The signature used the marquee tag to slide in the lines one at a time, and they then stayed put. It was brilliantly done - just enough movement to catch the eye, and certainly not cringeworthy as we usually expect from marquee.

The lessons I learned are a) that marquee still has its place, no matter how small, and b) 'All generalisations are bad'. As for non-standard/deprecated - Outlook has pretty much dictated that the only rule in HTML emails is that if it works, it's good. There no use in polishing a you-know-what.

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