A true expert on compilers could probably write a series of *really* good essays about how certain language features affect the optimizability (is that a real word?) of a language; possible even expressed in language that a passing decent programmer without deep experience in compilers could follow. I'd *love* to read that series even though I'm unlikely to ever implement a compiler for a Turing complete language again (and the only one I've done was a crappy, recursive-descent, immediate-code-generation toy modeled on the [Crenshaw tutorial][1]).

But ...

* The current expression of the question is horrible. That should be correctable, but it does lead me to wonder if the OP even has the background to understand the answer.

* Really good answers to this questions are going to be **big**. Like I said: a series of essays or a short book. You might squeeze a decent one into the character limit for posts but it would certainly be a *very long* post by Stack Exchange standards.

I'm a little surprised at the close reason chosen, but not enormously because most merely decent programmers don't seem to know the subject in any depth but *do* seem to have strongly held opinions on the matter. Reading the [pure amount][2] of [verbiage spilled][3] on [Programmers][4] on related topics is telling. 

If someone wanted to fix the text I could get behind a movement to undelete and re-open, but my money is on lots of crappy answers, a few informed ones addressing some part of the problem or another and very few or none that really tackle the whole problem.


  [1]: http://compilers.iecc.com/crenshaw/
  [2]: https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/optimization
  [3]: https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/language-design
  [4]: https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/