Hi

thanks for taking the time to answer :-)
I'll read through the mailing list. Thanks a ton!
Add this serendipity to the list of workarounds:

With lualatex, \setsansfont{DejaVu Sans Mono} can provide nice results with
~vini, vidi, vinci~ as long as you either don't have listings or you use a
completely different font for your listings.

Thanks again, /PA

On Tue, 2 Dec 2025 at 17:28, Max Nikulin <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 01/12/2025 14:25, Pedro Andres Aranda Gutierrez wrote:
> >
> > I have an document with Latin expressions like 'mutatis mutandis', which
> > my publisher wants to be typeset in Sans-Serif.
> > [...]
> > This is done easily in done in LaTeX (\textsf{mutatis mutandis})
>
> First of all, I would consider logical markup and custom command, e.g.
> \latintext{...} instead of explicit \textsf{}.
>
> > Let's find a way of expressing this natively in Org. It's an addition,
> > so taking a bit of care this would *not* break old documents.
>
> See
>
> Juan Manuel Macías. Experimental public branch for inline special
> blocks. Fri, 01 Mar 2024 20:34:35 +0000.
> <https://list.orgmode.org/[email protected]>
>
> and related threads.
>
> Ideas of workarounds:
> - Perhaps you do not use _underlined_ text, so with custom ox backend
> you may export it as sans serif.
> - I am not sure if it would be successful, but would try some export
> filter to replace specific LaTeX command with another object.
> - As to Org macros, you need to be careful with commas: {{{latin(veni,
> vidi, vici)}}}, they must be escaped by backslash.
>
>

-- 
Fragen sind nicht da, um beantwortet zu werden,
Fragen sind da um gestellt zu werden
Georg Kreisler

"Sagen's Paradeiser" (ORF: Als Radiohören gefährlich war) => write BE!
Year 1 of the New Koprocracy

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