This makes pterm.exe support the same (very small) subset of the
standard option collection that Unix pterm does. Namely, -load (which
won't do anything useful with a hostname to connect to, but is still
useful if you have a saved session containing configuration like
colours or default size or what have you), and also -sessionlog.
To make this work, I've had to move the 'tooltype' definition out of
window.c into {putty,pterm}.c, so that it can be defined differently
in the two.
Using a new screenshot-taking module I just added in windows/utils,
these new options allow me to start up one of the tools with
demonstration window contents and automatically save a .BMP screenshot
to disk. This will allow me to keep essentially the same set of demo
images and update them easily to keep pace with the current appearance
of the real tools as PuTTY - and Windows itself - both evolve.
This prepares the ground for a second essentially similarly-shaped
program reusing most of window.c but handling its command line and
startup differently. A couple of large parts of WinMain() to do with
backend selection and command-line handling are now subfunctions in a
separate file putty.c.
Also, our custom AppUserModelId is defined in that file, so that it
can vary with the client application.