[`props`](/docs/components-and-props.html) (short for "properties") and [`state`](/docs/state-and-lifecycle.html) are both plain JavaScript objects. While both hold information that influences the output of render, they are different in one important way: `props` get passed *to* the component (similar to function parameters) whereas `state` is managed *within* the component (similar to variables declared within a function).
Calls to `setState` are asynchronous - don't rely on `this.state` to reflect the new value immediately after calling `setState`. Pass an updater function instead of an object if you need to compute values based on the current state (see below for details).
Passing an update function allows you to access the current state value inside the updater. Since `setState` calls are batched, this lets you chain updates and ensure they build on top of each other instead of conflicting:
Currently, `setState` is asynchronous inside event handlers.
This ensures, for example, that if both `Parent` and `Child` call `setState` during a click event, `Child` isn't re-rendered twice. Instead, React "flushes" the state updates at the end of the browser event. This results in significant performance improvements in larger apps.
This is an implementation detail so avoid relying on it directly. In the future versions, React will batch updates by default in more cases.
As explained in the previous section, React intentionally "waits" until all components call `setState()` in their event handlers before starting to re-render. This boosts performance by avoiding unnecessary re-renders.
However, you might still be wondering why React doesn't just update `this.state` immediately without re-rendering.
There are two main reasons:
* This would break the consistency between `props` and `state`, causing issues that are very hard to debug.
* This would make some of the new features we're working on impossible to implement.
This [GitHub comment](https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/11527#issuecomment-360199710) dives deep into the specific examples.