That Question is Awesome!
That question is actually really great even though it might look really horrible and smelly. Please keep it open.
It leads to something optimizers typically don't do the best job of optimizing, and that's when aliasing is involved. There are interesting presentations from game developers on this subject from the likes of Christer Ericson (God of War fame) which are old but not necessarily outdated.
Mysticial actually provided one of the simplest, most practical, general kind of theoretical answers from the compiler design perspective on why this case is difficult to optimize (unless inlined to a point where sufficient info is available) in the comments:
If I was a compiler, I would see that your two examples aren't the
same. It's possible that p points to the same memory as bitmap->width.
Therefore I can't legally optimize the first example to the second
one.
... which is something I always find annoying, when really great answers are in the comment section (sometimes making me wish an up-vote of a comment at least awarded something).
But this is one of those questions that might have stumbled upon a very reasonable Q&A topic, even if by total accident. It's a question that now belongs in my personal favorites/bookmark, since it's a really useful thing for a developer like me to keep in mind.
Actually a lot of my posts on meta relate to this topic of a seemingly-bad question. Some of the most fruitful Q&As on the site will be in a grey zone where they look like really bad questions (and might even be in terms of the site's rules). But they actually aren't in terms of providing information that is very interesting to others and answers which point out something very interesting and unexpected.