VBN2470
Well-Known Member
Wouldn't it still be 10! ways to arrange the coins if the boxes were still distinct?Nup, there are no factorials or perms/combs here. If the coins and the boxes are both distinguishable, then each coin has 4 possibilities, each leading to a different result. So the number of cases if we allow a box to be empty is 4¹⁰.
If we want at least one coin in each box, we have to subtract cases from this. I am getting 4¹⁰ - 4×3¹⁰ + 6×2¹⁰ - 8. But I'm not too sure about this and am prepared for a correction.