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.