The ROUTINES table provides
      information about stored routines (both procedures and functions).
      The ROUTINES table does not include
      user-defined functions (UDFs) at this time.
    
      The column named “mysql.proc name”
      indicates the mysql.proc table column that
      corresponds to the
      INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES table
      column, if any.
    
| INFORMATION_SCHEMAName | mysql.procName | Remarks | 
| SPECIFIC_NAME | specific_name | |
| ROUTINE_CATALOG | NULL | |
| ROUTINE_SCHEMA | db | |
| ROUTINE_NAME | name | |
| ROUTINE_TYPE | type | {PROCEDURE|FUNCTION} | 
| DTD_IDENTIFIER | data type descriptor | |
| ROUTINE_BODY | SQL | |
| ROUTINE_DEFINITION | body | |
| EXTERNAL_NAME | NULL | |
| EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE | language | NULL | 
| PARAMETER_STYLE | SQL | |
| IS_DETERMINISTIC | is_deterministic | |
| SQL_DATA_ACCESS | sql_data_access | |
| SQL_PATH | NULL | |
| SECURITY_TYPE | security_type | |
| CREATED | created | |
| LAST_ALTERED | modified | |
| SQL_MODE | sql_mode | MySQL extension | 
| ROUTINE_COMMENT | comment | MySQL extension | 
| DEFINER | definer | MySQL extension | 
| CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT | MySQL extension | |
| COLLATION_CONNECTION | MySQL extension | |
| DATABASE_COLLATION | MySQL extension | 
Notes:
          MySQL calculates EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE thus:
        
              If mysql.proc.language='SQL',
              EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE is
              NULL
            
              Otherwise, EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE is what is
              in mysql.proc.language. However, we do
              not have external languages yet, so it is always
              NULL.
            
          CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT is the session value
          of the character_set_client
          system variable when the routine was created.
          COLLATION_CONNECTION is the session value
          of the collation_connection
          system variable when the routine was created.
          DATABASE_COLLATION is the collation of the
          database with which the routine is associated.
        


User Comments
In case you would want to view all the stored procedures in a Database then we can use :
SELECT ROUTINE_NAME
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES
WHERE ROUTINE_TYPE="PROCEDURE"
AND ROUTINE_SCHEMA="dbname";
You could use the same statement for FUNCTIONS just set
ROUTINE_TYPE="FUNCTION" in the WHERE clause
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