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The table's horizontal scroll doesn't work with this template, so wide tables span outside of the main content area making the entire page wider and requiring you to instead horizontally scroll the entire page. Zooming out to see the entire table makes the headers sticky, but also makes the text smaller and less readable the wider the table is.
The scrolling and sticky headers work in cell phones, too. Widest scrolling tables are on top of the list below. Narrow your browser window until you see a horizontal scroll bar. Drag it left and right to see the sticky row headers that stay visible. Template:2020 monthly cumulative COVID-19 death totals by country; Template:2021 2nd half.
Note that only the three subtemplates mentioned above are used to make the tables — this template page serves solely as documentation. Some notes: The scrollbar only appears if the table is actually wider than the page. This template allows up to 30 row headers passed as parameters to its {{Scrolling table/top}} subtemplate, for convenience.
This template is used to create arrows pointing in the four cardinal directions, in various colour options. See the tables below for all currently-available values. See the tables below for all currently-available values.
This template should not be used in main article space, as it renders any content obscured within the template unprintable. This is especially true with text content, such as citations, according to a June 2007 discussion. Please, if you see a scroll box in article space, remove it and put a hidden warning.
If you create a single row template, it can easily be embedded in a different template with different scale. The single row template will be automatically cropped to fit the parent template. See how {{Geological eras}} and {{Geological periods}} are embedded in {{Extinction events graphical timeline}} Different browsers have different ways of ...
This template is designed to display transcluded pages in a compressed, scrolling window on a second page. All data from the transcluded page will be fully displayed on the second page without any side scrolling required.
The marquee tag is a non-standard HTML element which causes text to scroll up, down, left or right automatically. The tag was first introduced in early versions of Microsoft's Internet Explorer, and was compared to Netscape's blink element, as a proprietary non-standard extension to the HTML standard with usability problems.