The Tennessean: Arsenic Kitchen Takes Over The Marquee Theater With High-Energy Performance
It’s hard to think of a time when the Marquee Theatre wasn’t part of the Valley’s concert scene. The cavernous 1,500-person Tempe venue is a live music institution that’s been a go-to spot for ...
San Angelo Standard-Times: Arsenic Kitchen and Premier Linkin Park Tribute ‘In The End’ at Tempe’s Marquee Theatre on April 18th
Arsenic Kitchen and Premier Linkin Park Tribute ‘In The End’ Announce Co-Headlining Spectacle at Tempe’s Marquee Theatre on April 18th PHOENIX, AZ, UNITED ...
Arsenic Kitchen and Premier Linkin Park Tribute ‘In The End’ at Tempe’s Marquee Theatre on April 18th
And I don't get why. So, can anybody explain to me, why is marquee deprecated, why is so "dangerous" using it and what can I use instead? I found an example, it looks nice. When you use all prefixes needed for good browser support, you have around 20-25 lines of CSS, with 2 values hardcoded (start and stop indent), depending on text length.
Now I can get the basic marquee effect, but the code is too specific for this demo. Is there a way to avoid using specific values like margin-left:-4200px;, so that it can adapt text in any length?
The marquee tag was introduced by either Netscape or Microsoft, back then when there was a browser war between Netscape 4 and IE4. It could be part of HTML 3, but definitely not of the HTML 4 Standard. Nevertheless, current browsers just support it, since the code is already builtin for backwards compatibility.
HTML | What is