An example is right in the name. Today we know that "clever" operators like the pair of ++ increment operators in C++ are a bad idea. They too easily allow mistakes to hide in plain sight, the programmer writes ++n where they actually needed n++ or vice versa, and a reviewer's brain overlooks this and so it gets shipped.
If you're playing Code Golf then these operators are a big benefit, but we aren't playing Code Golf, we're writing actual software that will be used in the real world, so explicitly spelling out what you meant is good.
As a result some modern languages deliberately do not have these operators. And e.g. as I understand it Swift actually removed these operators from the language. But C++ 20 still has both operators of course, it's just that your local dialect might forbid one or both of them.