English common law is a dispute resolution system with time and repetition. It essentially becomes codified law when played out dozens of times with the same agreed outcome.
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Outcomes roughly similar, but process very different.
Codification is top-down, prescriptive, and necessarily reactive.
Precedent is bottom-up, inductive, and always has scope for incremental change.
I understand the difference. What I'm saying is that common law becomes equivalent when written down after the same decision is made multiple times, in fact even every time subsequent to the first time.