Very different. What you are describing are "no gyro vectors," not a DF steer. With a DF steer, the person on the ground is simply looking at a strobe line showing your bearing from his/her station -- no range information, just bearing. They'll tell you to fly the reciprocal of that initially, and then correct for drift by giving you additional headings. A "no gyro vector" is just a version of partial panel timed turns in which a controller is watching your position and movement on radar, and instead of just giving you the new heading, computes the time of turn from the last assigned heading at 3 deg/sec, and then times the turn for you, saving you the math and the clock-watching so you can focus on a good, level, standard rate turn.
The DF steer was for being lost and out of radar coverage but in radio contact with a DF-equipped facility so they know your bearing from there, but not your range. The no-gyro vector is for when they know where you are (i.e., have you on radar) and are vectoring you, but you're have lost your gyro heading indicator, and are having trouble handling the timed turns on your own.