wp_ajax declaration confusing for Front end

I mean is_admin() is to check if you are on the administration so it
will return false, so the code inside won´t be executed on the
front-end, won´t it ?

When you send an AJAX request using this method, you are sending it to wp-admin/admin-ajax.php, which is in the admin. This is explained in the text you’ve quoted yourself:

Both front-end and back-end Ajax requests use admin-ajax.php so
is_admin() will always return true in your action handling code.

It’s irrelevant where the AJAX request was sent from. When the request is made it is a completely separate request to the original front-end request that loaded whatever page you were on. It’s a new request to the WordPress admin.

The important thing to remember is that an AJAX request is really just JavaScript opening a web page in the background. So it’s the same as if you opened /wp-admin/admin-ajax.php in a new tab. If you did that then is_admin() would be true, which is why it’s still true when you make that request with JavaScript.

The other thing to remember is that add_action() calls queue up functions to run only for the current request. Those add_action() calls are run every time a page is loaded, getting stuff ready for the rest of the page load. When you load a front end page with your code, it queues up my_frontend_action() to run if the current request is an AJAX request, but it’s not, so nothing happens. Nothing is stored or remembered for a later AJAX request made from that page.

When the AJAX request is made, this condition is checked again, but add_action() is never run because is_admin() is true, so nothing happens, and because the add_action() from the front-end request is not stored or remembered, it doesn’t fire this time either.