This prevents issues with using standard C functions, where microsoft
would otherwise spit out pointless warnings to encourage using
microsoft-specific functions instead.
I've come to realize that it's probably not wise to deviate from the
original version's functionality due to the fact that the original
version works without issues. I'm wondering if some of the capture
problems have been due to the fact that the direct hook method (via
CreateRemoteThread) was removed, so I put it back in, made it default,
and added an option to use anti-cheat compatibility just like in the
original version.
This makes a minor adjustment to the interval at which the inject helper
tries to post the inject message to the target process. Only 2 seconds
before, now up to 4 seconds, with the PostThreadMessage called every
half second for the duration.
The reason I did this is because I noticed that on rare occasions that
it wouldn't hook due to the low interval; usually just because the
target process is busy and isn't able to process its message queue, and
therefor the hook wouldn't go through due to the fact that
SetWindowsHookEx won't inject until the set event has occurred. The
inject helper program would just close before the thread message had
finally been processed, which would cancel the SetWindowsHookEx hooking.