MySQL has two different types of variable:
-
local variables (which are not prefixed by
@) are strongly typed and scoped to the stored program block in which they are declared. Note that, as documented underDECLARESyntax:DECLAREis permitted only inside aBEGIN ... ENDcompound statement and must be at its start, before any other statements. -
user variables (which are prefixed by
@) are loosely typed and scoped to the session. Note that they neither need nor can be declared—just use them directly.
Therefore, if you are defining a stored program and actually do want a “local variable”, per the wording in your question, you will need to drop the @ character and ensure that your DECLARE statement is at the start of your program block. Otherwise, to use a “user variable”, drop the DECLARE statement.
Furthermore, you will either need to surround your query in parentheses in order to execute it as a subquery:
SET @countTotal = (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM nGrams);
Or else, you could use SELECT ... INTO:
SELECT COUNT(*) INTO @countTotal FROM nGrams;