Here is an example to explain it:
If we look at the sql tag, then there are a lot of questions that have many possible answers. They could be tagged as follows:
one-time-operation: Typically answers that are not very performant but easy to understand. Also answers that tend to follow in the next category.
generalized: Will work on all major dbms: oracle, postgres, mysql, db2 ... to be defined.
Or for all programming languages we could have two tags: optimized-readability and optimized-performance and maybe more to show more clearly what the goal of the answer is.
Why? Depending on what the goal is the answers can be very different, this would make it easier to find what you are looking for and gives hints to beginners.
You may say this should be decided on the question-level, but often it isn't done and you can only use 5 tags. It seems silly to ask the same question twice, e.g. once with the goal of improved readability and once with improved performance. It should also be considered that the search engines likely prefer one of the questions and then only this one is found in the first hits, so splitting it doesn't seem to be wise.