The
state is what you need to know to be able to assign probabilities to all possible* results of all measurements. In particular, if you know the state and what measuring device is being used, you will be able to assign probabilities to the possible results of the measurement you're doing right now.
If you know the preparation procedure that the particle has been subjected to, you have enough information, but that doesn't mean that preparation=state, because it's possible that many different preparation procedures are associated with the same probability assignments. So a state should be thought of as an
equivalence class of preparation procedures.
There are many ways to represent a state mathematically. In a book like Griffiths (which I have only read a very small part of), the only mathematical representation of a state is a wavefunction.
In classical mechanics, a state is usually represented by a pair (x,v) or (x,p). x is position, v is velocity and p is momentum. The reason for that is that the theory is built up around a differential equation of the form x''(t)=f(x'(t),x(t),t), which has a unique solution x for each initial condition. An initial condition is a pair of equalities that specify the values of the two functions at a single point in their domain: x(t
0)=x
0, p(t
0)=p
0. If you know the solution x, you can compute v and p. So if you know the value of (x(t),v(t)) or (x(t),p(t)) at
one time, you can determine it at
all times.
Note that this is consistent with the more general definition of "state" that I opened with, because knowing the state of a classical system allows you to assign probabilities to each possible* result of each measurement. We don't usually talk about classical mechanics in this way, because the probabilities are always 0 or 1 when we have the maximum amount of obtainable information about the system. (The maximum amount of information that would be obtainable in principle in a universe that's exactly as described by this classical theory).
By the way, if we have all the relevant obtainable information, the state is said to be
pure. If we can only assign a probability to each preparation procedure that may have been used, the state is said to be
mixed. Wavefunctions in QM represent pure states. Mixed states are represented by
density operators.
*) By "possible results of measurements", I mean those numbers that the measuring device is capable of telling us is the result. I
don't mean that every possible results can actually happen in a realistic situation.