What do you call t-shaped steel bar?
When working with hot steel, the best analogy I’ve used is that metal becomes a lot like clay when heated. Your job is to shape it like you would clay. To make things long and skinny, you can grab a piece of clay and stretch it, and it just breaks. Unfortunately, it takes a bit more work than that to stretch a piece of metal. Steel is not Silly Putty.
You use basic forces to move your metal. To make a long, skinny piece out of a short fat piece, you squeeze the sides of the metal, and turn the work. If you take a square of clay and squeeze it on the four sides repeatedly, it eventually becomes a long, thin polygon.
There are three fundamental ways to apply force (again, there are more, but we’re keeping it simple).