I would also have thought .s-b .d because let's say for example the fonts might be the same in all .desc, but there might be other settings that might differ.
.status-button .description is more cascading. If you have multiple elements that take use of the .description, for example the font, weight or the color, you can group other elements without having to execute all styles from status-button. You will be able to use the user's recognition factor for similar looking appearences.
what does that mean? You click the button, and what happens? Something happens to tell you the status of something?
I would probably do <button class="btn-desc btn-icon"> for a button that has all three assuming you have other types of elements that could have a description or icon
Hm, btw... if you change the div to a button you have some advantages: text-to-voice can read the button for deaf people, you can hotkey the button and you can tab throu the formular using the tab-key (and space-key will do a click like classic windows formulars do).
so in my css I had written .status-button .description in my css, and then a team member changed it to just .description (because hey we don't need the whole tree, and maybe the name description should be more descriptive and exact for that class.
yes because that would result in: <div class="status-button><div class="status-button-icon"/><div class="status-button-description"/><div class="status-button-value"/></div>
and I won't be able to reuse any of the stuff in a description (for example) with any other (e.g toolbar) description
one common way to solve that problem is to make your classes specific enough to the kind of element they will be applied to (this is referred to as "semantic") so that you in theory only ever need to use one or two classes for every single selector
but if we were to add another button (like a toolbar) then we would have to have the name specific enough so that they wouldn't be confused, hence the very long name status-button-description
we never actually got to that name yet, I just think that's what the future looks like if we should have such specific names
Unfortunately I support the team-member because if we have a simple change from the design-specialists like "Make all descriptions bigger" you have - in a perfect world - only one statement to write (the .description). Using extrem-specific queries you have to write many styles for every single kind of description (status-button-description, button-description, field-description, label-description, input-description, warn-description etc.).