The definition of Codominance from Cornell is this just as a reference:
Mode of inheritance in which phenotypic expression of two different alleles occurs in the heterozygote as a result of neither allele being dominant over the other.
Again, in relationship to pythons, we can only consider it codominance If and only If muliple alleles can contribute without effecting the other. So in looking at it under a different light, any complex can be considered co-dominant even if they are not on the same loci and contribute to a super form. However, the main issue at hand is going to be dominance in this post, and rectifying that the super forms of MANY of the morphs out there are in fact lethal in their homozygous state.
Spider and Pin in our examples up to this point.