HTML and CSS,
one simple command
AirPro merges HTML structure and CSS styling into single readable commands. Write a .arp file, click it — and your page is built. No HTML, no CSS, no separate files.
Features
HTML + CSS,
one command at a time
AirPro merges HTML structure and CSS styling into single commands — no tags, no selectors, no separate files.
One-Click Compile
Just click your .arp file and AirPro compiles it straight to a working HTML page — no terminal, no build tools.
Simple Command Syntax
Instead of tags and attributes, you write readable commands like heading, button, and image.
HTML + CSS in One
Each command handles structure and style together — text "Hi" color white size large does what HTML + CSS would take 10 lines to do.
Compiles to HTML
AirPro output is standard HTML — host it anywhere, share it with anyone. No special runtime or server needed.
Rich Components
Navbars, frames, tables, forms, image galleries, buttons, and more — all available as simple commands.
No HTML Knowledge Needed
AirPro is designed for everyone — you can build a full webpage without ever touching an HTML tag.
How it works
From .arp to HTML
Three steps — write, click, done. No terminal required.
Create a .arp file
Write your page using AirPro's command syntax — headings, text, buttons, images, and more.
Click to compile
Click the .arp file and AirPro instantly compiles it to a fully working HTML page.
Host or share
The output is plain HTML — drop it anywhere: Vercel, GitHub Pages, or any web host.
Our Mission
Why we built AirPro
"Our mission is to help people programming in simple forms of code."
— The AirNet Team
The name says it all — Air for AirNet, Pro for programming. AirPro was born out of a simple frustration: HTML and CSS are powerful but complex. AirPro solves this by merging the two into a single, readable command syntax — so anyone can build a real webpage without ever opening a .html or .css file.
✦ The AirPro website itself was built entirely using AirPro.
Ready to build your first .arp page?
Download AirPro, write a few commands, click the file — and your HTML page is ready.