A stored routine is either a procedure or a function. Stored
      routines are created with the CREATE
      PROCEDURE and CREATE
      FUNCTION statements (see
      Section 15.1.17, “CREATE PROCEDURE and CREATE FUNCTION Statements”). A procedure is invoked using
      a CALL statement (see
      Section 15.2.1, “CALL Statement”), and can only pass back values using
      output variables. A function can be called from inside a statement
      just like any other function (that is, by invoking the function's
      name), and can return a scalar value. The body of a stored routine
      can use compound statements (see
      Section 15.6, “Compound Statement Syntax”).
    
      Stored routines can be dropped with the DROP
      PROCEDURE and DROP
      FUNCTION statements (see
      Section 15.1.29, “DROP PROCEDURE and DROP FUNCTION Statements”), and altered with the
      ALTER PROCEDURE and
      ALTER FUNCTION statements (see
      Section 15.1.7, “ALTER PROCEDURE Statement”).
    
A stored procedure or function is associated with a particular database. This has several implications:
- When the routine is invoked, an implicit - USEis performed (and undone when the routine terminates).- db_name- USEstatements within stored routines are not permitted.
- You can qualify routine names with the database name. This can be used to refer to a routine that is not in the current database. For example, to invoke a stored procedure - por function- fthat is associated with the- testdatabase, you can say- CALL test.p()or- test.f().
- When a database is dropped, all stored routines associated with it are dropped as well. 
Stored functions cannot be recursive.
      Recursion in stored procedures is permitted but disabled by
      default. To enable recursion, set the
      max_sp_recursion_depth server
      system variable to a value greater than zero. Stored procedure
      recursion increases the demand on thread stack space. If you
      increase the value of
      max_sp_recursion_depth, it may be
      necessary to increase thread stack size by increasing the value of
      thread_stack at server startup.
      See Section 7.1.8, “Server System Variables”, for more
      information.
    
      MySQL supports a very useful extension that enables the use of
      regular SELECT statements (that is,
      without using cursors or local variables) inside a stored
      procedure. The result set of such a query is simply sent directly
      to the client. Multiple SELECT
      statements generate multiple result sets, so the client must use a
      MySQL client library that supports multiple result sets. This
      means the client must use a client library from a version of MySQL
      at least as recent as 4.1. The client should also specify the
      CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS option when it connects.
      For C programs, this can be done with the
      mysql_real_connect() C API
      function. See mysql_real_connect(), and
      Multiple Statement Execution Support.
    
In MySQL 8.0.22 and later, a user variable referenced by a statement in a stored procedure has its type determined the first time the procedure is invoked, and retains this type each time the procedure is invoked thereafter.