Very often we get questions about performance differences between similar ways to express the same thing, such as these two asked within 15 minutes of each other today:
What is more efficient for a PHP variable, $timelimit 10*60; or $limit 600;?
Which is more efficient: string concatenation or substitution?
These are practically always about differences that in practice have negligible performance difference. It's misleading for anyone to think that they matter, and it's a waste of time (IMHO) to answer them.
My usual reaction to these questions is to post a comment with a link to a website that explains Donald Knuth's quote premature optimization is the root of all evil. But I feel like this isn't sufficient -- people will still waste effort benchmarking it just to show how negligible it is (someone did that in the first question above, his result was 16ns per assignment).
I feel like questions about performance should be based on actual code that's experiencing performance problems -- for instance, we often get good questions about complex SQL queries that the poster needs help optimizing. Theoretical or curiosity questions like the above should be closable in some way. If you agree, what close reason would you suggest?