From: "Alexander Kuleshov" <kuleshovm...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2014 3:53 AM

None of these warrant the code churn, I would say.

Sorry, english is not my first language, what did you mean when
saying:
"code churn"? Code duplication or something else?
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Hi Alexander,

The term 'churn' is originally from British butter making.

Churn:
verb
 1.shake (milk or cream) in a machine in order to produce butter.
 "the cream is ripened before it is churned"
       synonyms: stir, agitate;

  2.(with reference to liquid) move or cause to move about vigorously.
 "the seas churned".


For Code (used in a somewhat negative sense), it means that lots of bits are moved around a great deal for
little apparent benefit.

In the sense Junio used it, I believe it's suggesting that the balance between the amount of change and usefulness of the change had gone further than hoped. (Though Junio is usually open to receiving a well argued case)

Philip
see also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churn_rate

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