I think we will have to agree to disagree.
"The simplest of the sugars is glucose, C6H12O6, although its physical chemistry is not that simple because it occurs in two distinct forms which affect some of its properties. Sucrose, C12H22O11, is a disaccharide, a condensation molecule made up of
two glucose molecules [less a water molecule to make the chemistry work]." (source
The target=_blank>http://www.sucrose.com/learn.html)
The
Oxford Uni article you mention says "Sucrose is a disaccharide that yields 1 equiv of glucose and 1 equiv of fructose on acidic hydrolysis" - i don't know what acidic hydrolysis is, but according to this article it produces
invert sugar. (Interestingly it doesn't mention carbon in it's diagram...)
I was taught by my biologist that sugar requires effort/energy to be broken down into glucose and is usually stored as fat reserves by the body; the body will turn to ready glucose supplies first.
shall we call it a draw?