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Our White Lipped Python doing what he does best -- looking evil.

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

A big python of 5 metres as a necklace. Tanah Lot Bali Indonesia september 2005

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

www.learntek.org/product/python-for-juniors/

 

Learntek is global online training provider on Big Data Analytics, Hadoop, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, IOT, AI, Cloud Technology, DEVOPS, Digital Marketing and other IT and Management courses. We are dedicated to designing, developing and implementing training programs for students, corporate employees and business professional.

 

www.learntek.org

South Florida: In-situ Burmese found basking.

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Workshops for PHP developers who want to switch into Python!

look in the roof - seriously this was in one of the entertainment rooms!! scary!

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Diamond python in Brisbane Water National Park

De Pythonbrug of Hoge Brug (brugnummer 1998) is een vaste brug in Amsterdam. Ook is er op het Borneo-eiland een Korte Brug (brug 1999).

 

Zij is gespannen over het Spoorwegbassin in het Oostelijk Havengebied en verbindt de Panamakade op het schiereiland Sporenburg met de Stuurmankade op het Borneo-eiland. De brug werd in 2001 opgeleverd.

 

De naam verwijst naar de opvallende golvende vorm, als een voortbewegende python. De brug werd aanvankelijk ook wel Anaconda-, Salamander of Dinosaurusbrug genoemd. De felrode brug is ongeveer 90 meter lang en ontworpen door Adriaan Geuze van het architectenbureau West 8 dat ook woningen in de buurt heeft ontworpen. De stalen brug met houten plankiers steunend op beton is alleen geschikt voor voetgangers.

Real Italian leather with special python patterns

Super chic python patterns + black leather trim

Black leather bands adorn python patterns surface

Polished golden metal hardware

Fully lined interior with zip pocket & open holders

Wide size leather shoulder straps are adjustable

  

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

If you look closely, you can see a python coiled up in the tree. He was about 4" in diameter around the middle -- roughly 2 meters long we guessed.

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

21st MAY, LONDON - Asim Ihsan shows how to profile in Python with: Tools and techniques to measure and improve the performance of your Python code. See the SkillsCast (film, code, slides) at: skillsmatter.com/podcast/scala/be-a-better-developer/mh-7353

Australian Native Female Green Tree Python

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Workshops for PHP developers who want to switch into Python!

Workshops for PHP developers who want to switch into Python!

TKD WAG9 as the lagging part of the annaconda rake is stranded on the up main line at Vindhyachal due to technical snag.

An Athlete Wrestling with a Python by Frederic, Lord Leighton (1877) in the Royal Academy of Art

Python starting on it's meal of an Impala

Python reticulatus,

Upper Peirce Reservoir

My wife spotted this juvenile python as we were hunting for them along a Bangkok canal.

my first time to adjust focus with Adobe Photoshop Elements. Not the perfect job, but still practicing. I think I will jump to use CS5 soon

pythonic art

The Diamond Python (Morelia spilota spilota) is a subspecies of the widespread Carpet Python, but is only found in south-eastern Australia. Budgong, NSW. July 2009

Masdevallia macrura 'Python' - John Leathers

Drugo srečanje Python uporabnikov 22. marca v Kiberpipi.

 

19:00 Uvod

19:15 Gamedev with pygame (Anže Pečar)

19:30 Speeding up algorithms in python (Miha Zidar)

19:45 Binary deployment of your Python projects, NOW! (Rok Garbas)

20:00 Finding similar images with Python (Jernej Virag)

20:15 Load testing with FunkLoad (Andraž Brodnik)

This is my ball python. His name is monty. He's pretty cool.

Fotos oficiais da Python Brasil

Python reticulatus, also known as the (Asiatic) reticulated python is a species of python found in Southeast Asia. Adults can grow to over 28 feet (8.7 m) in length but normally grow to an average of 10–20 feet. They are the world's longest snakes and longest reptile, but are not the most heavily built. Like all pythons, they are nonvenomous constrictors and normally not considered dangerous to humans. Although large specimens are powerful enough to kill an adult human, attacks are only occasionally reported.

 

An excellent swimmer, Python reticulatus has been reported far out at sea and has colonized many small islands within its range. The specific name is Latin meaning net-like, or reticulated, and is a reference to the complex color pattern.

 

Adults can grow to a length of more than 28.5 feet (8.7 m) and are the world's longest snakes. However, they are relatively slim for their length and are certainly not the most heavily built. The species Eunectes murinus, the green anaconda, may be heavier.

 

The largest individual ever accurately measured was Colossus, a female kept at the Highland Park Zoo (now Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania during the 1950s and early 1960s, with a peak length of 28.5 feet (8.7 m). When she died, April 15, 1963, her body was deposited in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. At that time she was measured and found to be significantly shorter than the measurements previously published by Barton and Allen. Apparently they had been adding a few extra feet to the measurements to compensate for "kinks", since it is virtually impossible to completely straighten an extremely large live python. Too large to be preserved with formaldehyde and then stored in alcohol, the specimen was instead prepared as a disarticulated skeleton. The hide was sent to a lab to be tanned, and unfortunately it was either lost or destroyed.

 

Numerous reports have been made of larger snakes, but since none of these have been measured by a scientist nor have the specimens been deposited at a museum, they must be regarded as unproven and probably erroneous. In spite of a standing offer of $50,000 for a live, healthy snake over 30 feet (9.1 m) long by the New York Zoological Society, no attempt to claim this reward has ever been made.

 

The color pattern is a complex geometric pattern that incorporates different colors. The back typically has a series of irregular diamond shapes which are flanked by smaller markings with light centers. In this species wide range, much variation of size, color, and markings commonly occurs.

 

In zoo exhibits the color pattern may seem garish, but in a shadowy jungle environment amid fallen leaves and debris it allows them to virtually disappear. Called a disruptive coloration, it protects them from predators and helps them to catch their prey.

 

Found in Southeast Asia from the Nicobar Islands, Bangladesh, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Singapore, east through Indonesia and the Indo-Australian Archipelago (Sumatra, the Mentawai Islands, the Natuna Islands, Borneo, Sulawesi, Java, Lombok, Sumbawa, Sumba, Flores, Timor, Maluku, Tanimbar Islands) and the Philippines (Basilan, Bohol, Cebu, Leyte, Luzon, Mindanao, Mindoro, Negros, Palawan, Panay, Polillo, Samar, Tawi-Tawi). The original description does not include a type locality. Restricted to "Java" by Brongersma (1972).

 

Three sub-species have been proposed, but are not recognized by ITIS. The color and size can vary a great deal between the sub-species described. Geographical location is a good key to establishing the sub-species, each one has a distinct geographical range.

 

The python lives in rain forests, woodland and nearby grassland. It is also associated with rivers and is found in areas with nearby streams and lakes. An excellent swimmer, it has even been reported far out at sea and has consequently colonized many small islands within its range. During the early years of the twentieth century it is said to have been common even in busy parts of Bangkok, sometimes eating domestic animals.

 

Their natural diet includes mammals and occasionally birds. Small specimens—up to 3–4 meters (10–14 ft) long—eat mainly rodents such as rats, whereas larger individuals switch to prey such as Viverridae (e.g. civets and binturongs), and even primates and pigs. Near human habitation, they are known to snatch stray chickens, cats and dogs on occasion. Among the largest, fully documented prey items to have been taken are a half-starved Sun Bear of 23 kilograms that was eaten by a 6.95 m (23 ft) specimen and took some ten weeks to digest, as well as pigs of more than 60 kg (132 lb). As a rule of thumb, these snakes seem able to swallow prey up to ¼ their own length, and up to their own weight. As with all pythons, they are ambush hunters, waiting until prey wanders within strike range before seizing it in their coils and killing via constriction.

 

Reptile House

Bronx Zoo New York

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