About us

office with 3d designers

Frontyanra was created from a simple observation: many people want to learn HTML, CSS, and JS, but they often feel lost at the very beginning. Not because they lack interest, but because topics are often presented in a scattered way, with heavy explanations and examples that do not always show how code works inside a real page. Our team created this course to make learning calm, organized, and connected to practice.

The idea for the course began with the personal background of our learning author — Zaharcenko Alona, HTML Structure Designer. At the beginning of her own path, Alona often noticed that HTML was explained as a set of separate tags, CSS as a list of styling rules, and JS as something distant from the page structure. She wanted to create materials where these parts would be shown as one connected system: what builds the page frame, what shapes the visual layer, and what adds simple interaction.

This challenge became the foundation for Frontyanra. Alona started preparing learning notes, small diagrams, code fragments, and page examples for people who wanted to understand how a simple web page comes together. At first, these materials were used as short explanations and practice references. Over time, they developed into a set of course modules where each topic has its own place and each example shows a specific role inside a page.

Alona’s work focuses on HTML structure, CSS layouts, and basic JS scenarios for study pages, small web projects, and digital learning materials. Her background includes organizing markup, preparing page sections, creating readable class names, and building layouts that are easier to follow during practice. She pays close attention to how each part of the page works with the next one, so learners can see the connection between structure, styling, and interaction.

Zaharcenko Alona

In previous learning and web-related projects, Alona worked with page blocks, repeated card layouts, button sections, text areas, and small JS interactions for practice examples. Her approach is not built around loud claims. It is based on careful work with details: how to name a class, how to divide a page into sections, how to make spacing logical, and how to explain code so the learner can connect each line with what appears on the page.

Many learners come to Frontyanra with a similar issue: they can see the code, but they do not fully understand how it forms a complete page. That is why Alona shapes lessons around small, readable steps: first the frame, then the style, then the logic, and then the assembled block. This method keeps the material organized and helps learners move through HTML, CSS, and JS without unnecessary noise.

The mission of Frontyanra is to help people learn HTML, CSS, and JS through calm explanations, practical examples, and organized modules. We do not build the course around big claims. We create materials that help learners develop skills, read code more carefully, and understand how a web page is made from separate parts.

Frontyanra is not about rushing. It is about structure, thoughtful practice, and a learning rhythm where every topic has its place.