Why do you want to create a temporary table in a stored procedure in the first place?
It is relatively common to create temporary tables in other databases (SQL Server and MySQL, for example). It is very, very rare to do the same thing in Oracle. In almost every case where you are tempted to create a temporary table in Oracle, there is a better architectural approach. There is a thread over on the DBA stack that discusses alternatives to temporary tables and why they are not commonly needed in Oracle.
Programmatically, you can create objects using dynamic SQL
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE dont_do_this
AS
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE a( id INTEGER )';
END;
If you create a temporary table dynamically, however, every reference to that table will also need to be via dynamic SQL-- you won't be able to write simple SELECT
statements against the table. And the definition of a temporary table in Oracle is global so it is visible to every session. If you have two different sessions both trying to create the same table, the second session will get an error. If you expect the table to have a different definition in different sessions, you've got even more problems.
CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE A(ID INT) ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS
outside the procedure instead. It'll be session specific, and cleared at every commit.