
Coding With Basher: Code Your Own Website
by The Coder School
Basher's Code Your Own Website is a vibrant, kid‑friendly guide that invites young readers to explore HTML, CSS, and JavaScript through cheerful characters like URL, Domain, Browser, and Router. Written for budding programmers and curious minds, this approachable book blends practical steps with playful scenes to spark creativity while teaching online safety and responsible digital skills. Inside, Basher's Code Your Own Website unfolds in a friendly, step-by-step flow. The book uses a narrative style where each concept is personified by a character, guiding you through structure, style, and interactivity. The pace is welcoming, with bright illustrations that simplify complex ideas and small, doable tasks that empower you to build your own dynamic site as you learn. Beyond coding basics, the guide foregrounds safe online habits, helping readers distinguish the good guys from the bad on the web. It presents the essentials in an approachable way, making learning feel like an adventure rather than a chore, with Basher’s signature humor keeping you engaged from first line to last. Clear introduction to HTML, CSS, and JavaScript and how they work together to build a website Playful characters (URL, Domain, Browser, Router) that personify concepts Step-by-step projects to code a real, working website Bright illustrations and friendly, accessible writing style Practical online-safety tips woven into the lessons Accessible for beginners, with a pace that supports independent learning After finishing Basher's Code Your Own Website, readers gain the confidence to try their own web ideas, understand how the internet works, and approach online spaces with curiosity and caution. The book leaves them feeling empowered, inspired to explore more, and ready to share their creations with pride.
🗣️Ask Your Child & click to complete
What do you think?
🤔How did it make you feel?
Click all reactions that apply (each can only be selected once)
🏷️Parent Reviews
Help other parents by sharing what worked (or didn't) for your family



