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I have a VBA code where I need to define a constant string containing Non-Unicode characters (£). As some might know, VBA Editor doesn't support non-unicode and uses windows "System Locale" setting in regional and language setting to parse/map these characters. The machine I develop the code is set to English system Locale but some of the users have that setting as other languages, e.g. Chinese which turns the string constant to question mark (£ --> ?).

Now, £ = chr(163), however, you cannot use chr as part of defining a constant in VBA. So while this is allowed:

public const mystring = "reference constant string with £"

this is not allowed in VBA"

public const mystring = "reference constant string with " & chr(163).

One way around is to define mystring as a public/global variable:

Constants.bas

public mystring as string

and then set the public variable on start of running code or Excel opening.

ThisWorkbook

Private Sub Workbook_Open()
    mystring = "reference constant string with " & chr(163).
End Sub

One issue with this process is the public variables get cleared when error happens or the code stops. To keep the value an alternate I came across was to avoid public variable and instead use a public property get. Note that I have to include this a part of a class.

**.cls

Public Property Get mystring () As String
    mystring = "\R;;" & Chr(163)
End Property

So, now I am wondering if there will be any issue with this approach? or perhaps there is a better approach to address the constant variable with non-unicode character.

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1 Answer 1

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The main issue is the name of the module, Constants - it's misleading, since neither a public/global variable nor a public get-only property are constants.

Side node, constants not being assignable to non-constant expressions isn't a limitation that's specific to VBA.

Properties are perfectly legal in standard modules, and public get-only properties are a perfectly fine way to expose a read-only value that needs to be constructed at run-time.

the public variables get cleared when error happens or the code stops

Assuming "when error happens" involves clicking End and effectively ending the execution context, that is true of everything exposed anywhere, whether it's a global variable, a public property, an object, or anything that exists in-memory at run-time... and that's just normal stuff - the value is simply available on-demand any time.

Again there's no need to have a class module for this, this is perfectly legal in a standard module:

Option Explicit

Public Property Get MyString() As String
    MyString = "\R;;" & Chr(163)
End Property

If re-creating the string every time the property getter is accessed is a problem, then you need a way to persist its value in a backing field - but then, this backing field (whether it's in a class or standard module) only has a value when the execution context exists, meaning it has exactly the same problem a global variable would have: execution stops, it's gone.

One work-around could be to use a class with the VB_PredeclaredId attribute set to True (default is False).

VERSION 1.0 CLASS
BEGIN
  MultiUse = -1  'True
END
Attribute VB_Name = "Class1"
Attribute VB_GlobalNameSpace = False
Attribute VB_Creatable = False
Attribute VB_PredeclaredId = True
Attribute VB_Exposed = True
Option Explicit

Private internalString As String

Private Sub Class_Initialize()
    internalString = "\R;;" & Chr(163)
End Sub

Public Property Get MyString() As String
    MyString = internalString
End Property

And now VBA will automatically create an instance of Class1 whenever it's referenced, as soon as it's referenced, and that instance remains "alive" until an End statement is explicitly executed, or the execution context is otherwise terminated. Exactly like, say, a UserForm class, you access this default instance using the class name as an identifier:

Debug.Print Class1.MyString

If the default instance existed when Class1 was referenced, the internalString is returned. If it didn't, then Class_Initialize executes, then the internalString is returned.

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  • Thanks Mathieu Guindon, I tried the in-module property declaration and experiencing a little bit of strange behavior. It sometimes give me out of memory or automation error or crashes excel. The project I am working on is a bit code-heavy. Also I am only using this string at a few places. Have you had any experience with the memory usage of the property declaration outside the class ? I am trying to minimize the memory load with the change to this string.
    – Moe
    Jan 15, 2019 at 21:12
  • What kind of string are we talking about? "\R;;" & Chr(163) is definitely not the cause of any memory issues... Jan 15, 2019 at 21:14
  • Yeah, I was a bit surprised to see the issues for one simple string, could be something temporary. I am gonna try some more after a few clean excel restart to see if it happens again.
    – Moe
    Jan 15, 2019 at 21:55

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