HTML
The starting point for every build — structure, semantics, and turning an empty page into something real.
Included topicNot a curriculum — just the tools and technologies that show up as we build real websites.
The starting point for every build — structure, semantics, and turning an empty page into something real.
Included topicFiguring out layout, spacing, and visual decisions as problems come up, not as abstract design theory.
Included topicAdding just enough behavior to make things interactive, responsive, and feel alive without overengineering.
Included topicLight backend work when needed — forms, logic, and glue code that connects the front end to real functionality.
Included topicWorking with real data instead of placeholders, including APIs, databases, and the messy edges they introduce.
Included topicDebugging, refactoring, deployment quirks, small fixes, and whatever unexpected details show up during real builds.
Included topic


A real website built from scratch — starting simple, making decisions as they come up, and adjusting when things don’t work the first time.
This isn’t a polished case study. It’s a look at the actual process, starting from an empty folder and figuring things out step by step.
No scripts, no perfect plan — just building, adjusting, and learning as the site takes shape.
If you’re stuck on a page, trying to understand a concept, or just want a second set of eyes while you build, we can sit down and work through it together.
These aren’t lectures or courses — just focused, practical sessions centered around whatever you’re building right now.






Codebuild isn’t a polished agency pipeline. It’s a practical way of building real websites—starting simple, making decisions as they come up, and adjusting when something doesn’t work the first time.
Begin with the smallest useful version of the site and build forward from there.
Every layout, component, and interaction has a reason behind it.
A working site beats a perfect plan. Progress happens in real code.
Once it’s live, we adjust, clean up, and improve what actually matters.


One-on-one sessions focused on real websites and real code. No subscriptions. No long-term commitments.
Most people start with a single one-hour session.








