The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARYJournal hooks are used to record and play back events, such as keyboard and mouse events. Journal hooks are system-wide hooks that take control of all user input, and therefore should be used as little as possible. MORE INFORMATION
Note that Windows NT does not ship with a Recorder application, as Windows
3.1 does. Therefore, it may be desirable to create an application that can
play back macros recorded under Windows 3.1. However, there are a number of
different problems with the Windows NT implementation of journaling that
make it difficult to use macros recorded under Windows 3.1.
The EVENTMSG structures recorded under Windows 3.1 that hold keystrokes do
not play back under Windows NT. They must be modified, because the journal
playback hook parses a scan code out of the EVENTMSG structure differently
than the Windows 3.1 journal record hook put it in the structure. Under
Windows 3.1, paramH specifies the repeat count. Under Windows NT, there is
no way to specify a repeat count; it is always assumed to be 1.
Additional query words:
Keywords : kbHook kbNTOS350 kbNTOS351 kbSDKWin32 kbGrpUser |
Last Reviewed: February 3, 2000 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |