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Marquee Tag Examples

Behavior o Alternate o Scroll o Slide

Direction Sizing o Height/Width o HSpace/VSpace

BEHAVIOR
ALTERNATE Example code: <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE WIDTH=100% BEHAVIOR=ALTERNATE BGColor=yellow>This is an example of an alternating marquee...</MARQUEE></FONT> Result of example code:

SCROLL Example code: <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE WIDTH=100% BEHAVIOR=SCROLL BGColor=yellow LOOP=3>This is an example of a scrolling marquee...</MARQUEE></FONT> Result of example code:

SLIDE Example code: <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE WIDTH=100% BEHAVIOR=SLIDE BGColor=yellow>This is an example of a sliding marquee...</MARQUEE></FONT> Result of example code:

To the Table of Contents

DIRECTION
Example code: <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE WIDTH=100% BEHAVIOR=SCROLL DIRECTION=RIGHT BGColor=yellow>This is an example of a marquee scrolling to the right...</MARQUEE></FONT> Result of example code:

To the Table of Contents

DIRECTION

Example code: <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE WIDTH=100% BEHAVIOR=SCROLL DIRECTION=RIGHT BGColor=yellow>This is an example of a marquee scrolling to the right...</MARQUEE></FONT> Result of example code:

To the Table of Contents

SIZING
HEIGHT / WIDTH Example code: <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE BEHAVIOR=SCROLL HEIGHT=25 WIDTH=300 BGColor=yellow>This is an example of a scrolling marquee</MARQUEE></FONT> Result of example code:

HSPACE / VSPACE Example code: Preceeding text. <FONT SIZE="4" FACE="courier" COLOR=blue><MARQUEE WIDTH=100% BEHAVIOR=SCROLL HSPACE=15 VSPACE=25 BGColor=yellow>This is an example of a scrolling marquee</MARQUEE></FONT> Following text. Result of example code:

Preceeding text. To the Table of Contents

Following text.

|Title Page| |Basic Template| |Color| |Dynamic HTML/Layers| |Form Tags| |Frame Tags| |HTML Entities / ISO Characters| |Image Tags| |Link Tags| |List Tags| |Other Spacing / Layout Tags| |Rule Tags| |Sound Tags| |Style Sheets| |Table Tags I| |Table Tags II| |Text Tags| |Bibliography / Resources| |Index|

David Merchant 2001. <

Acute angles

What is an acute angle? An acute angle is an angle greater than 0 degrees but less than 90 degrees.

If an angle is exactly 90 degrees is it still called an acute angle? No. For an angle to be called an acute angle it must be less than 90 degrees.

What is a right angle? A right angle is an angle that is 90 degrees.

Must an angle be exactly 90 degrees to be called a right angle? Yes. For an angle to be called a right angle it must be exactly 90 degrees.

What is an obtuse angle? An obtuse angle is an angle that is greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees.

If an angle is exactly 180 degrees is it still called an obtuse angle? No. For an angle to be called an obtuse angle it must be less than 180 degrees.

What is an reflex angle? A reflex angle is an angle that is greater than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees.

If an angle is exactly 180 degrees is it large enough to be called a reflex angle? No. For an angle to be called an reflex angle it must be greater than180 degrees.

What does angles around a point means? Lines from one point form angles around that point.

What is special about angles around a point? The angles around a point add up to 360 degrees.

Does it matter how many angles there are? No. Any number of angles around a point add up to 360 degrees.

So there could be just 2 or 3 angles around a point and they would still add up to 360 degrees? Yes, so long as the angles go all the way around the point.

Can we do a possible question using the fact that the angles around a point add up to 360 degrees? Yes, you may be given the size of all except one of the angles around a point and asked to find the size of the unknown angle.

STEP 1 ---- ADD the known angles together 135 + 90 + 70 = 295 STEP 2 ---- SUBTRACT the answer to STEP 1 from 360 360 - 295 = 65 Answer........ Angle A = 65 degrees ........ Angle A = 65

SAMPLE QUESTION

Are there always exactly 3 angles in a triangle? Yes, every triangle has exactly three sides and exactly 3 angles inside the triangle.

Is there anything special about the angles in a triangle? Yes. THE ANGLES IN A TRIANGLE ADD UP TO 180 DEGREES.

Can we do a possible question using the fact that the 3 angles in a triangle add up to 180 degrees? Yes, you may be given the size of two of the angles inside a triangle and asked to find the size of the third angle.

STEP 1 ---- ADD the 2 known angles together 30 + 70 = 100 STEP 2 ---- SUBTRACT the answer to STEP 1 from 180 180 - 100 = 80 Answer........ Angle A = 80 degrees ........ Angle A = 80

SAMPLE QUESTION

One angle in a triangle is 50 degrees, another angle is 60 degrees, what is the size of the third angle?

Area Of A Square

Area = Side Side


What do we mean by the area of a square? By the area of a square we mean the amount of surface that the square covers.

If a question asks me to calculate the area of a square, how do I do that? You are required to show a method with a calculation. What is the method? The method is to multiply the length of a side by the length of a side. Area of square = length of side length of side. Can we write that in a shorter way? Yes, we can just write the formula as: Area = side side. Can we do an example of the calculation of the area of a square? Certainly, let us calculate the area of the square in the following diagram.

Area = side side Area = 2 2 = 4 The units are cm cm = cm2 we say this as centimetre times centimetre equals centimetre squared but sometimes instead of centimetre squared we say square centimetres. So, the actual answer is: Area of square = 4 cm2 Can we do another example but only show the necessary working?

Yes, here we go.

Area = side side Area = 3 3 = 9 cm cm = cm2 Area = 9 cm2 Why does the formula, area = side side, give us the area of a square? Excellent question and we can see why in the following diagrams.

SAMPLE QUESTION

Calculate the area of this square?

Volume Of A Cylinder
Volume = Radius2 Height V = r2 h
Thank you to the maths.com user of GCSE Foundation Topics who asked for the formula for the volume of a cylinder.

r = radius of base of cylinder h = height of cylinder Volume of Cylinder =rrh = r2 h = r2 h which can be said as "pi r squared h".

Pythagoras' Theorem
A triangle with a right angle Three sides long short other long long = short short + other other

long long = short short + other other

long2 = short2 + other2 Long Squared Equals Short Squared Plus Other Squared

CSE Maths Foundation Level ALGEBRA PRACTICE

Linear Equations
x = b a x = b a a a x = ab OR show as follows x = b a a a x = ab Example x = 5 2 2 2 x = 10 OR show as follows x = 5 2 2 2 x = 10
x divided by a equals b the opposite of a is a apply a to other side to keep equation in balance consolidate both sides

x divided by 2 equals 5 the opposite of 2 is 2 apply 2 to other side to keep equation in balance consolidate both sides

More about Syllables


Syllables: Onsets, Rhymes, Nuclei & Coda What are Syllables?
Words can be broken up into smaller units, its syllables. Syllables are really just organizational units for a sequence of speed sounds. A word must contains at least one syllable.

What do Syllables do?


Syllables make speech easier for the human brain to process. Humans rely on syllables as a way of analyzing the stream of speech to give it a rhythm of beats, both weak and strong, as we often hear in music. Syllables are tremendously influential in a language's conveyance of information and greatly affects a language's rhythm, metric structure and inflections.

Parts of a Syllable
A syllable is made up of a vowel core with optional preceding and following vocal margins which are typically made up by consonants. Proficient speakers of English have no trouble dividing a word up into its component syllables. Sometimes how a particular word is divided might vary from one individual to another, but a division is always easy and always possible. Using a dash to mark between the syllables, here are some examples:
hear: potato: hear (one syllable) po-ta-to

distribution: dis-tri-bu-tion

Syllables have internal structure, namely they can be divided into parts. The parts are onset and rhyme; within the rhyme we find the nucleus and coda. Not all syllables have all parts, and the smallest possible syllable contains a nucleus only. A syllable may or may not have an onset and a coda. Onset refers to the beginning sounds of a syllable, and rhyme (or rime) is the rest of the syllable. Using bold for the onsets and italics for the rhymes, "distribution" can be represented as "dis-tribu-tion." A rhyme can itself be broken up into a nucleus and coda. The nucleus, as the term suggests, is the core part and is a necessary component of any syllable, and it the more resonant sound, most

often a vowel. Codas are the less significant part of a syllable and are more often comprised by the consonant sounds. Go on to a discussion about etymology

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