OneManCrew
Active Member
That site doesn't have FLASH at all, your confused.
And when you say FLASH the language used in FLASH sites is Action Script 3.0.
And when you say FLASH the language used in FLASH sites is Action Script 3.0.
i asked respected developerone thing u must hv to know
when u r going to learn a language,WHATEVER JAVA,php,python,asp,jsp,javascript.
At first u must have to knowledge in C or C++
they are basic.
If u r looking to make templates
then u can directly know html & css [they dont reqr knowledge on programming]
as they are designing
Same thing goes for Database(Sql/oracle),no knowledge reqd. in programming for this.
one thing u must hv to know
when u r going to learn a language,WHATEVER JAVA,php,python,asp,jsp,javascript.
At first u must have to knowledge in C or C++
they are basic.
If u r looking to make templates
then u can directly know html & css [they dont reqr knowledge on programming]
as they are designing
Same thing goes for Database(Sql/oracle),no knowledge reqd. in programming for this.
really@chaudhary9
Why you are wasting your time with those websites? Just pick up a good book and read it, that's the only and the only way to master anything!!
<marquee style="background-color: blue; height:500px; width:40%;" onmouseover="stop()" onmouseout="start()" direction="left">
Stop there, you were on the right track. Most (if not all) tags or attributes that controls the visual appearance of webpage have been deprecated. You should use CSS styling for appearances, layouts and decoration.
Wait a second, your post is confusing, i mean that you should go with this kind of usage: <body style="background-color: red; color:white">
<marquee
bgcolor=blue height=500px width=40% onmouseover="stop()" onmouseout="start()" direction=left >
Edit again:
As for that marquee tag:
You can use it like this:
You can specify direction using marquee-direction, however it is from CSS 3 onwards only and you will need to use browser-specific prefixes.PHP:<marquee style="background-color: blue; height:500px; width:40%;" onmouseover="stop()" onmouseout="start()" direction="left">
Yesi guess styling things will need it but rest of it will be used the way it is right?
Nope, the bold part is the only wrong thing. I edited my reply above for correct use. onmouseover and onmouseout are javascript events. You can't specify them in CSS.
Yes