of processes. With a shell that does not know about job control,
like <code>ash</code>, each of its children will be in the same session
and have the same process group as the shell. With a shell that knows
-about job control, like <code>bash</code>, the processes of one pipeline. like
+about job control, like <code>bash</code>, the processes of one pipeline, like
</p><blockquote>
<pre>% cat paper | ideal | pic | tbl | eqn | ditroff > out
</pre>
larger than 1 that is not a process group ID.
</p><p>A process can set the foreground process group in its session
using <code>tcsetpgrp(fd,pgrp)</code>, where <code>fd</code> refers to its
-controlling tty, and <code>pgrp</code> is a process group in the
+controlling tty, and <code>pgrp</code> is a process group in
its session, and this session still is associated to the controlling
tty of the calling process.
</p><p>How does one get <code>fd</code>? By definition, <code>/dev/tty</code>