About Us

Our team created Syntaxor because we wanted to build a calmer and more structured way to study PHP. The first version of the course began from the practical experience of the course author, KIRILS GRAHOLSKIS, who started working with backend development through small scripts, form handling, structured files, and database tables. In the beginning, he faced the same challenges many learners meet: unclear file organization, mixed logic, confusing examples, and code that worked but was difficult to explain. Over time, he learned that useful learning materials should not only show code, but also explain the reasoning behind each part. That idea became the foundation of Syntaxor.
The mission of Syntaxor is to help learners study PHP programming through structured modules, practical examples, database-focused exercises, and careful code reading. The course is designed for people who want to understand how backend code is built step by step: how data is received, checked, organized, stored, displayed, and updated. Instead of presenting PHP as a random collection of commands, Syntaxor arranges topics into a learning route that connects syntax, server logic, database structure, and small practical scenarios.
KIRILS GRAHOLSKIS is a PHP course author and backend learning material creator with experience in PHP development, database structure, internal tools, form handling, and practical code organization. His background includes work with small business websites, content management structures, booking forms, admin panels, reporting layouts, and database-backed learning examples. He has worked on practical web environments where PHP and relational databases were used to organize content, users, forms, records, and structured information.
Before creating Syntaxor, KIRILS spent several years building and reviewing backend features for practical web projects. His work included writing PHP scripts, organizing database tables, preparing form-processing logic, reviewing older code, creating internal documentation, and explaining server-side workflows to learners and early-stage developers. Through this experience, he saw that many beginners did not need loud marketing or unrealistic claims. They needed clean explanations, realistic examples, and a course structure that respected the learning process.
KIRILS has prepared learning materials for students, independent learners, and early-stage developers through structured guides, internal training materials, downloadable resources, and course-based lessons. His teaching style focuses on readable examples, careful topic order, and exercises that connect directly to the lesson. He prefers to explain why code is written a certain way, how data moves through a page, and how PHP interacts with database records in everyday backend tasks.
The Syntaxor course materials bring together this background into one digital learning space. Lessons cover PHP basics, variables, conditions, loops, arrays, functions, forms, request flow, file structure, database organization, data handling, and practical backend patterns. Each module is written to support steady learning without pressure-based language or exaggerated claims. The goal is not to promise outcomes, but to provide useful materials that help learners build stronger understanding through study, repetition, and practice.
Syntaxor is for learners who want PHP and database topics explained with structure and patience. It is also for people who prefer practical examples over vague theory. Whether someone is reading their first PHP file or reviewing how forms connect with database records, the course is built to make each step easier to follow. Our team believes that backend learning becomes more manageable when code is explained as a connected system: data enters, logic checks it, the database stores it, and PHP prepares the response.
That is why Syntaxor exists: to give learners a clear, practical, and organized way to study PHP programming and database foundations through digital course materials created with care.