I have the following sample code:
Context context = new Context();
Repository repository = new Repository(context);
Post post = repository.First
You have a few options here.
((ObjectQuery)query).ToTraceString()
see https://stackoverflow.com/a/7901917/1070291 (I think this only works for queries so may not be the best in the above scenario)The EF Profiler specified in the other answer is a beast - wildly powerful, but that doesn't come for free ($$, disk space and time). It's also made by Oren Eini of NHibernate and RavenDB fame.
The tools I like to use in a pinch are way, way more light-weight, and of course can't begin to compare to EF Prof in terms of features - but the cost ($$, time and disk) is, or approaches, zero.
I tested these lightweight profilers with EF on LocalDb, but their main use cases are the more traditional Sql Server flavors (including Express).
By far the easiest to use one (and also the most bare-bones-show-me-the-SQL-statements-kthxbye) is ExpressProfiler on CodePlex.
And the whole program is a single 126 KB EXE ! Now that's lightweight!
The other one is the one from DataWizard, which used to be free (apparently prices now start at $5).
Somebody managed to save a snapshot on GitHub (including xcopy-installable binaries) when it was open-source.
The executable presents itself as "AnjLab Sql Profiler" and allows some filtering of the displayed events - but this strength is also its weakness, as there are sooo many event types that can be enabled/disabled. If everything is selected, the output is overwhelmingly verbose.
A saner output can be obtain by only selecting specific events.
Here are the events I have selected in order to get the above output: