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How to: Declare A Constant (Visual Basic)

You use the Const statement to declare a constant and set its value. By declaring a constant, you assign a meaningful name to a value. Once a constant is declared, it cannot be modified or assigned a new value.

You declare a constant within a procedure or in the declarations section of a module, class, or structure. Class or structure-level constants are Private by default, but may also be declared as Public, Friend, Protected, or Protected Friend for the appropriate level of code access.

The constant must have a valid symbolic name (the rules are the same as those for creating variable names) and an expression composed of numeric or string constants and operators (but no function calls).

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To declare a constant

  • Write a declaration that includes an access specifier, the Const keyword, and an expression, as in the following examples:

    Public Const DaysInYear = 365
    Private Const WorkDays = 250
    

    When Option Strict is On, you must declare a constant explicitly by specifying a data type (Boolean, Byte, Char, DateTime, Decimal, Double, Integer, Long, Short, Single, or String). When Option Strict is Off, the constant is assigned a data type by the compiler. For more information, see Constant and Literal Data Types (Visual Basic).

To declare a constant with Option Strict On

  • With Option Strict On, write a declaration that includes the As keyword and an explicit data type, as in the following examples:

    Public Const MyInteger As Integer = 42
    Private Const DaysInWeek As Short = 7
    Protected Friend Const Funday As String = "Sunday"
    

    You can declare multiple constants on a single line, although your code is more readable if you declare only a single constant per line. If you declare multiple constants on a single line, they must all have the same access level (Public, Private, Friend, Protected, or Protected Friend).

To declare multiple constants on a single line

  • Separate the declarations with a comma and a space, as in the following example:

    Public Const Four As Integer = 4, Five As Integer = 5, Six As Integer = 44
    

See Also

Tasks

How to: Declare Enumerations (Visual Basic)

Reference

Const Statement (Visual Basic)

Option Strict Statement

Concepts

Constant and Literal Data Types (Visual Basic)

Enumerations Overview (Visual Basic)

Constants Overview (Visual Basic)

Enumerations and Name Qualification (Visual Basic)

Constants and Enumerations (Visual Basic)

Other Resources

Constants and Enumerations in Visual Basic