A VECTOR is a structure that can hold up to a
        specified number of entries N,
        defined as shown here:
      
VECTOR(N)Each entry is a 4-byte (single-precision) floating-point value.
        The default length is 2048; the maximum is 16383 entries. To
        declare a VECTOR column of the default
        length, define it as VECTOR with no
        parentheses following; trying to define a column as
        VECTOR() (with empty parentheses) raises a
        syntax error.
      
        A VECTOR cannot be compared to any other
        type. It can be compared to another VECTOR
        for equality, but no other comparison is possible.
      
        A VECTOR column cannot be used as any type of
        key. This includes all of the following types:
- Primary key 
- Foreign key 
- Unique key 
- Partitioning key 
        A VECTOR column also cannot be used as a
        histogram source.
VECTOR Supported and Unsupported Functions
        VECTOR values can be used with the MySQL
        string functions BIT_LENGTH(),
        CHAR_LENGTH(),
        HEX(),
        LENGTH(), and
        TO_BASE64(). Other string
        functions do not accept the VECTOR type as an
        argument.
      
        VECTOR can be used as an argument to any of
        the encryption functions
        AES_ENCRYPT(),
        COMPRESS(),
        MD5(),
        SHA1(), and
        SHA2(). VECTOR
        is not supported as an argument type by any other encryption
        functions.
      
        VECTOR can be used as an argument to the
        CASE operator and related
        flow-control functions, including
        COALESCE(),
        IFNULL(),
        NULLIF(), and
        IF().
      
        VECTOR can be used as the argument to
        CAST(); the result is a binary string with the
        same contents as the expression
        AS BINARYVECTOR argument. Casting
        to VECTOR with CAST is not
        supported; you can convert a suitable string to
        VECTOR using
        STRING_TO_VECTOR().
      
        VECTOR data types cannot be used as arguments
        to aggregate functions or window functions other than
        COUNT
        [DISTINCT].
      
        VECTOR cannot be used as an argument to any
        of the following types of functions and operators:
- Numeric functions and operators 
- Temporal functions 
- Fulltext search functions 
- XML functions 
- Bit functions such as bitwise - ANDand- OR
- JSON functions 
For more information, see Section 14.21, “Vector Functions”.
        VECTOR values are supported by JavaScript
        stored programs in MySQL 9.1 and later. See
        Section 27.3.4, “JavaScript Stored Program Data Types and Argument Handling”, for more information.