You might consider it as a problem for the compiler to figure out where parentheses would go.
Consider two operators, *
and +
if you have an infix notation, you can have statements like
X = A * B + C
which with ignorance of order of operations, a compiler might interpret as
X = ( A * B ) + C
or
X = A * ( B + C )
if written in post-fix notation there is no ambivilence. It is like the old HP calculators. There is a stack, an the operator pops two operands off the stack, and pushes the result back
So the first formula would look more like (ignoring the assignment to X, technically another operator)
A B * C +
while the second was
A B C + *
That said, your statement confused me a bit, because I thought that going from in-fix to post-fix was one intent of making a compiler, rather than a simple operation a compiler does