Tag marquee

🌀 The <marquee> Tag in HTML: Scrolling Text and Why You Should (or Shouldn’t) Use It

The <marquee> tag in HTML was originally introduced to create scrolling text or images on a web page. It may bring a nostalgic vibe from the early days of the web, but it’s important to understand both how it works and why it’s considered obsolete in modern web development.


📌 What Is the <marquee> Tag?

The <marquee> tag allows text (or other inline content) to scroll automatically within a defined area — horizontally or vertically.


📷 Basic Example

<marquee>Welcome to my website!</marquee>

🔁 This creates a simple scrolling message from right to left.


⚙️ Common Attributes

AttributeDescriptionExample Value
directionScroll direction (leftrightupdown)left
scrollamountSpeed of the scroll (higher = faster)10
behaviorScroll behavior (scrollslidealternate)alternate
loopNumber of times to scroll (-1 = infinite)3
bgcolorBackground color of the marquee area#f0f0f0
width / heightDimensions of the marquee box300px50%

📷 Visual Example 2: Custom Marquee

<marquee direction="up" scrollamount="3" behavior="alternate" bgcolor="#e0f7fa" height="100px">
<p>Scrolling announcement ↑</p>
</marquee>

🧭 This scrolls the text upward and bounces back and forth (alternate).


🧩 Structure Diagram

<marquee>
└── Content to scroll (text or inline elements)

You can place <img><span>, or even styled <div> elements inside it.


🚫 Why <marquee> Is Obsolete

The <marquee> tag is non-standard and was deprecated in HTML5. Modern browsers still support it for backward compatibility, but its use is strongly discouraged.

⚠️ Problems with <marquee>:

  • Inaccessible for screen readers.
  • Doesn’t respect modern web design or responsive layouts.
  • Poor support on mobile devices.
  • Cannot be styled or controlled easily with CSS.

✅ Modern Alternative: CSS Animation

Instead of using <marquee>, use CSS animations:

<div class="marquee-css">
<p>This is a modern scrolling text.</p>
</div>

<style>
.marquee-css {
width: 100%;
overflow: hidden;
white-space: nowrap;
box-sizing: border-box;
}

.marquee-css p {
display: inline-block;
animation: scroll-left 10s linear infinite;
}

@keyframes scroll-left {
from {
transform: translateX(100%);
}
to {
transform: translateX(-100%);
}
}
</style>

🎉 This gives you full control with CSS and works across all modern devices and screen sizes.


✅ Conclusion

The <marquee> tag is a relic of the early web — easy to use, but not suitable for today’s standards. If you’re building a modern, accessible, and responsive site, use CSS animations instead. However, for educational or nostalgic purposes, understanding <marquee> is still useful.