There's a simple alternative to ashleedawg's suggestion:
Use bytearrays instead of strings to declare the strings. That way, the VBA IDE can store the data independent of locale settings.
I use the following function to declare bytearrays in VBA (Note: errors if you pass anything else than a byte):
Public Function ByteArray(ParamArray bytes() As Variant) As Byte()
Dim output() As Byte
ReDim output(LBound(bytes) To UBound(bytes))
Dim l As Long
For l = LBound(bytes) To UBound(bytes)
output(l) = bytes(l)
Next
ByteArray = output
End Function
If you have this, you can do the following:
dim x as string
dim y as string
dim z as string
x = "English text"
'Or: x = ByteArray(&H45,&H0,&H6E,&H0,&H67,&H0,&H6C,&H0,&H69,&H0,&H73,&H0,&H68,&H0,&H20,&H0,&H74,&H0,&H65,&H0,&H78,&H0,&H74,&H0)
y = ByteArray(&HA,&H5C,&H6C,&H65,&H84,&H76)
z = ByteArray(&H53,&H30,&H93,&H30,&H6B,&H30,&H61,&H30,&H6F,&H30)
To get these bytearrays, I use the following worksheet function:
Public Function UnicodeToByteArray(str As String) As String
If Len(str) = 0 Then Exit Function
Dim bytes() As Byte
bytes = str
Dim l As Long
For l = 0 To UBound(bytes) - 1
UnicodeToByteArray = UnicodeToByteArray & "&H" & Hex(bytes(l)) & ","
Next
UnicodeToByteArray = UnicodeToByteArray & "&H" & Hex(bytes(UBound(bytes)))
End Function
You can use this in a worksheet (e.g. =UnicodeToByteArray(A1)
where A1 contains the string), and then copy-paste the result to VBA.
You can directly assign strings to bytearrays and reversed.
Note that unicode support varies throughout VBA. E.g. MsgBox z
will result in questionmarks, while Cells(1,1).Value = z
will set A1 to the desired string.