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Home/ Questions/Q 552067
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T11:27:37+00:00 2026-05-13T11:27:37+00:00

I found this keyboard hook code, which I’m trying to slightly modify for my

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I found this keyboard hook code, which I’m trying to slightly modify for my purposes: http://blogs.msdn.com/toub/archive/2006/05/03/589423.aspx

As an overview, I want to have the user press a key, say ‘E’, and have the keyboard return a different character, ‘Z’, to whatever app is in focus.

The relevant method I changed now looks like:

    private static IntPtr HookCallback(int nCode, IntPtr wParam, IntPtr lParam)
    {
        if (nCode >= 0 && wParam == (IntPtr)WM_KEYDOWN)
        {
            //The truely typed character:
            int vkCode = Marshal.ReadInt32(lParam);
            Console.WriteLine((Keys)vkCode);

            KBDLLHOOKSTRUCT replacementKey = (KBDLLHOOKSTRUCT)Marshal.PtrToStructure(lParam, typeof(KBDLLHOOKSTRUCT));
            replacementKey.vkCode = 90; // char 'Z'
            Marshal.StructureToPtr(replacementKey, lParam, false);

            //Now changed to my set character
            vkCode = Marshal.ReadInt32(lParam);
            Console.WriteLine((Keys)vkCode);
        }
        return CallNextHookEx(_hookID, nCode, wParam, lParam);
    }

The console correctly outputs this as:

E
Z
T
Z
G
Z
etc.

HOWEVER, the in focus app still types ‘E’ instead of ‘Z’. Why? I changed the hooked keyboard input to contain ‘Z’ instead of ‘E’, and the console lines show that it was changed correctly!

As I understand it, calling the return CallNextHookEx(_hookID, nCode, wParam, lParam); is what sends the “print this now” command to the open app. Is that not how it works? Is there something that’s preventing me from typing the character I want? I know apps like AutoHotkey take an input key, check it, and return a different character. How do I do the same here?

Thanks!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T11:27:38+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 11:27 am

    I’ve done this before but a little different.
    Instead of trying to change the parameters sent to CallNextHookEx, I ‘swallowed’ the key press (you can do this by returning a nonzero value from the hook procedure to prevent subsequent procedures from being called).

    Then I used SendInput to send the new key that I wanted to ‘inject’.

    So basically it works like this:

    • Hook procedure identifies a target key is pressed
    • Call to SendInput, with the new key
    • Return 1 from the hook procedure to ignore the original key

    Be careful of cyclic redirects, i.e. ‘a’ redirected to ‘b’ redirected to ‘a’, it can easily blow up 😉

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