Here is a question I wrote. I want to make sure it's correct. Anyone get it?
10 people go to a candy store in order for each to select 1 among 10 flavors of ice cream. Assuming each of flavor is equally likely to be selected by each person and each flavor can be selected by more than 1 person, what is the probability that exactly 3 people select the same flavor while the other 7 each select a flavor unique to himself?
(A) (10 choose 3)(10 choose 7)(10! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
(B) (10 choose 3)(10 choose 7)(9! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
(C) (10 choose 3)(10 choose 7)(9! / 2) ÷ (10!)
(D) (10 choose 3)(10! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
(E) (10 choose 3)(9! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
10 people go to a candy store in order for each to select 1 among 10 flavors of ice cream. Assuming each of flavor is equally likely to be selected by each person and each flavor can be selected by more than 1 person, what is the probability that exactly 3 people select the same flavor while the other 7 each select a flavor unique to himself?
(A) (10 choose 3)(10 choose 7)(10! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
(B) (10 choose 3)(10 choose 7)(9! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
(C) (10 choose 3)(10 choose 7)(9! / 2) ÷ (10!)
(D) (10 choose 3)(10! / 2) ÷ (10^10)
(E) (10 choose 3)(9! / 2) ÷ (10^10)