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y Start the FrontPage program and open an existing web.

y 2 Choose Show FrontPage Editor from the Tools menu, or click on the FrontPage Editor icon on the toolbar. y 3 Open the page to be edited and position the cursor where the marquee will be placed. y 4 Choose Marquee from the Insert menu. A dialog box appears. y 5 Type the text that will scroll across the page in the Text box. y 6 Choose the properties of the marquee using the dialog box options. Click OK when finished. A box will appear on the Web page, but the text will not scroll yet. y 7 Click once on the box and choose Font from the Format menu. Change the font, size and color as desired and click OK. y 8 Double-click on the box to make any changes to the marquee. y 9 Save the page when finished. y 10 Preview the page in a Web browser by choosing Preview in Browser from the File menu. From the dialog box, choose which browser to use and what settings.

Read more: How to Add a Marquee to a Web Page With FrontPage | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_12990_add-marquee-web.html#ixzz1k4ksPqGp

Scrolling Marquee in FrontPage If something needs immediate attention, a scrolling marquee can stand out, grabbing your viewers' attention. Open your web in FrontPage and place your cursor where you'd like a scrolling marquee. Select Insert from the pull-down menu and choose Web Component. Choose Marquee and click on the Finish button. In the Marquee Properties dialog box, type in the text that you wish to scroll, and make any desired changes to the setting. When satisfied, click ok. The marquee will be displayed as a static text box but will scroll when published or viewed in preview mode. To delete the marquee, click to select and press the delete key

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Access your FrontPage program. Open the webpage that you will be editing. Choose the location on your page that you will be adding the Marquee to. Click on the menu bar and choose Marquee. This opens the Marque Properties dialog box. Click the text box next to Text. In this area, type the text that you want to show in your Marquee.
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Click the area under Direction and choose left or right. This will allow you to move your text to the right or left side of the page. Click the down arrow next to Delay and choose the number that will determine the number of milliseconds you want to pass between the movement of your marquee across the page.
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Click the down arrow next to Amount and choose the number that will determine the distance that you want your marquee to move each time it moves across the page. Choose the way that you want you want your marquee to move across the page under Behavior. You will see three options: Scroll, Slide and Alternate.
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Click the down arrow next to Background color and choose the background color that you want for your marquee. Under Repeat, place a check mark in the box next to Continuously if you want your marquee to move across your page continuously. If you want your marquee to move across the page a certain number of times, uncheck the continuous box and click the down arrows under continuous to choose a number.
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Click OK to close the Marquee properties dialog box. Verify that your marquee shows correctly on your page with the options that you chose.

Read more: How to Add a Marquee Using FrontPage 2000 | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_4522456_add-marquee-using-frontpage-2000.html#ixzz1k4lnyciF

What A Marquee Is On A Web Page


Marquees scroll text horizontally across a web page. They are useful for attracting the reader's attention and are often used to display newsflashes. Although very popular in the early days of web design, they have fallen out of favour with current professional web designers. Nevertheless, if you have your heart set on adding a marquee to your web page using FrontPage, here's how to do it. In this example, we're going to add a marquee to an existing web page. Start FrontPage and then open the web page that you want to add a marquee to. Choose Show FrontPage Editor from the Tools menu, or click on the FrontPage Editor icon on the toolbar. Open the page to be edited and place the cursor where the marquee will be positioned. From the Insert menu go down to Component and then select Marquee and a dialogue box will appear. This is the Marquee Properties' dialog box. Into the text box type the text that you want to see scrolling across the page. The dialogue box also provides options for you to select the properties you want for the marquee. These properties allow youto control the speed, direction and behaviour of the scrolling text. Once you've assigned some properties, click OK. A box that represents the marquee will appear on the page, but you will not see any scrolling text just yet. If you click once on the text box, you will be able to choose a font from the Format menu that appears. You can also change the size and colour here. When finished, click OK. If you need to make any further changes to the marquee, just double click on the text box. When you have finished making your changes, press ctrl-s to save the page. To preview the web page, complete with scrolling marquee, click File > Preview in Browser. You'll need to select

which browser you want the preview to appear in. It's wise to test your web page in a variety of browsers, as not every reader will be using the same one as you.

Creating a scrolling marquee


In FrontPage, you can create a scrolling marquee by clicking Insert and Web Component. (You can find it listed under Dynamic Effects.) However, sometimes it's greyed out. This is because FrontPage inserts a MARQUEE element, which is only viewable from Internet Explorer. (Opera also displays the MARQUEE element properly.) To be able to add a marquee to your page, you need to specify that you are creating a page to be viewed only with Internet Explorer. You can do this from the Authoring tab of the Page Options dialog box (Tools menu). Under Browsers, select Microsoft Internet Explorer Only. Now that you know how to add a scrolling marquee, you may want to customize it. By default, FrontPage doesn't set any attributes when it inserts a marquee, so what you get is plain text that scrolls from right to left across the page. FrontPage provides a dialog box that allows you to change the direction (left or right), speed, behavior, size, and background color and specify whether the marquee repeats and how many times. This may provide all the functionality you want for your marquee, but what if you want to bold some text or add an image? Or what if you want the marquee to scroll from top to bottom or vice versa? One customer who contacted me wanted to make each letter a different color. Another customer wanted to add a hyperlink. Customizing a Marquee To add customizations that FrontPage doesn't allow in the dialog box, you need to modify the HTML code in Code view. You can add almost any element you want to a marquee, and it will work perfectly fine. However, keep in mind that when you do this, the display in FrontPage will be ... uh ... funky. The MARQUEE element is one of the few HTML elements that FrontPage does not display exactly WYSIWYG. Instead, you see all the code that you add within the opening and closing <marquee> tags. FrontPage sees these as text, but the browser does not. For example, perhaps you want to add a hyperlink to some text. You can switch to Code view and insert the hyperlink by adding an A element to the code (note that using the Hyperlink dialog box will add a hyperlink around the entire marquee and not just around selected text). To illustrate, I created a simple marquee and inserted a hyperlink around a portion of the text. In Design view, my marquee appears as shown in the following screen shot.

But in the browser, it scrolls as expected with hyperlinked text. So now that you understand that what you see in FrontPage won't be exactly correct, you can add any number of other HTML elements to a MARQUEE element. You can add P elements to create paragraphs; IMG elements to insert pictures; UL, OL, and LI elements to create numbered and bulleted lists; SPAN elements to change the color and font of one or more characters; B

elements, I elements, U elements, DIV elements, etc. (You can even add MARQUEE elements, which gives you overlapping scrolling marquees. This may sound kinda cool but it would be very strange if not done exactly right for example, a top to bottom scrolling marquee that contains a right to left scrolling marquee might be a bit interesting....) Vertical Scrolling Marquee In the Marquee Properties dialog box, FrontPage provides the ability to change the direction of the scroll from left to right or right to left (the default is right to left). However, the MARQUEE element allows for scrolling from top to bottom and bottom to top as well. After you insert the marquee into your page, switch to Code view and change the direction attribute of the MARQUEE element to "up" to scroll from bottom to top or "down" to scroll from top to bottom. Scripting the MARQUEE element There are a variety of things that you can do to change the appearance of scrolling marquees, but one I saw recently was someone who wanted the marquee to slow down upon mouseover. As long as browser compatibility isn't an issue, since this only works in IE, you can script the MARQUEE element to slow down on mouseover, and then to speed up on mouseout. The following two functions, slow and fast, change the scroll speed (by changing the scrollAmount property) of a specified MARQUEE element.
<script language="javascript"> function slow(ele) { ele.scrollAmount = 1; } function fast(ele) { ele.scrollAmount = 15; } </script>

All you need to do to see this in action is to add the following HTML code to a page and display th page in IE.
<marquee direction="up" width="238" height="100%" scrollamount="15" onmouseout="javascript:fast(this);" onmouseover="javascript:slow(this);">This is a test.</marquee>

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