khushal87/rajasthan-hackathon — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-07-18 · repo last pushed 2018-10-31
Review a hackathon submission from the 2018 Rajasthan government event.
Explore the Python source code to figure out what the project does.
Use the code as a starting point for a civic-tech prototype and build from there.
| khushal87/rajasthan-hackathon | 0xhassaan/nn-from-scratch | 100/praw | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | — | 0 | — |
| Language | Python | Python | Python |
| Last pushed | 2018-10-31 | — | 2015-09-26 |
| Maintenance | Dormant | — | Dormant |
| Setup difficulty | hard | moderate | moderate |
| Complexity | 2/5 | 4/5 | 2/5 |
| Audience | developer | developer | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
No README, setup instructions, or dependency list is provided, so you must read and reverse-engineer the code to figure out how to run it.
This repository, called Rajasthan Hackathon, was created for the Rajasthan Hackathon event in 2018. Based on what's available, it appears to be a project built during a competitive coding event, though the README doesn't go into detail about what the project actually does or what problem it solves. The code is written in Python, which is a popular programming language used for everything from web development to data analysis. However, without additional documentation or a description of the project's features, it's hard to say how the code works or what it produces. The repository seems to be more of a submission or archive from the hackathon rather than a maintained, documented tool. People who might look at this repo include fellow hackathon participants, organizers reviewing submissions, or anyone curious about what was built during the 2018 Rajasthan government hackathon. These events typically focus on civic technology solutions, so the project may address a public-sector challenge, but that's speculation rather than something confirmed by the documentation. If you're considering using or building on this code, be aware that there's no guidance on setup, usage, or dependencies. You'd need to explore the code directly to understand what it does and whether it's still functional. The README doesn't explain the project's goals, architecture, or how to run anything, so a fair amount of technical digging would be required to get value from it.
A Python project built for the 2018 Rajasthan Hackathon. The repo has no documentation describing what it does, so you'd need to read the code to find out.
Mainly Python. The stack also includes Python.
Dormant — no commits in 2+ years (last push 2018-10-31).
Setup difficulty is rated hard, with roughly 1h+ to a first successful run.
Mainly developer.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
double-check against the repo, no cap.