# Creating A PID Often times, when invoking a function that spawns a process, the PID of the spawned process is returned and we bind to it. That PID is a reference to some BEAM process in our system. We can create our own references using the `pid/3` function. Let's assume we have the following processes, among others, in our system at the moment. ```elixir > Process.list |> Enum.reverse |> Enum.take(3) [#PID<0.284.0>, #PID<0.283.0>, #PID<0.282.0>] ``` We can create a reference to any of them using the three number parts that they are made up of. ```elixir > pid(0, 284, 0) #PID<0.284.0> ``` See, it's alive. ```elixir > pid(0, 284, 0) |> Process.alive? true ``` What if we make up a PID that doesn't actually reference any process? ```elixir > pid(0, 333, 0) |> Process.alive? false ``` Note: there is also a `pid/1` version of the function. See `h pid` for more details.