prevState
is a name that you have given to the argument passed to setState callback function. What it holds is the value of state before the setState
was triggered by React; Since setState
does batching, its sometimes important to know what the previous state was when you want to update the new state based on the previous state value.
So if multiple setState calls are updating the same state, batching setState calls may lead to incorrect state being set. Consider an example:
state = {
count: 0
}
updateCount = () => {
this.setState({ count: this.state.count + 1});
this.setState({ count: this.state.count + 1});
this.setState({ count: this.state.count + 1});
this.setState({ count: this.state.count + 1});
}
In the above code you might expect the value of count to be 4 but it would actually be 1 since the last call to setState will override any previous value during batching. A way to solve this to use functional setState:
updateCount = () => {
this.setState(prevstate => ({ count: prevstate.count + 1}));
this.setState(prevstate => ({ count: prevstate.count + 1}));
this.setState(prevstate => ({ count: prevstate.count + 1}));
this.setState(prevstate => ({ count: prevstate.count + 1}));
}
prevState
isn't explicitly discussed in the react docs. The current top answer to this post elaborates on the what prevState is further than either the linked post this post is a supposed duplicate of or the react docs.