Generally no. If the temperature is hot they seek shelter and may actually go into a summer hibernation (estivate) until the weather cools or they emerge only after dark when it is cooler.
yes
It moves to seek protection from hot or cold temperatures, to avoid predators and to seek food or mate.
Rattlesnakes will move to a warm and sunny area when they are too cool and into the shade when they are too warm. They use the environment to manage their internal temperature. They are cold-blooded animals.
they like HOT temperaturesbut they don't like cold
it is realy hot
Rattlesnakes do not play with anything.
Rattlesnakes commonly live in hot climates in holes in the ground or, to put it technically, burrows. They sometimes go to other burrows in hope of finding food like wild rabbits, but usually it is not successful.
Still hot, but cooler than temperatures in the summertime.
Lime is grown in hot temperatures/degrees...like tropics
thermophiles
The hottest temp for a rattlesnake is 100 degrees
You haven't defined exactly how hot you mean by hot temperatures, but I can tell you that as temperatures increase, eventually all organic chemicals will break down.
Rattlesnakes live in hot weather because the heat gets a snake active, while the cold slows it down. That isn't for the rattlesnake only- every snake is slowed down by the cold.